

I can do it, but drastically have to cut quality. Works great to turn 100Gb file into 4Gb, but as far a streaming and recording live War Thunder Vulkan game play at 2160 p is no go. I can compress this stuff via HEVC on the GPU. The h.264 CPU encoder is not on par and gltches through out. Now I remember these things use to work on Linux dating back to when I had and Hp z620 and rtx 2080. I can see the image on screen and it gets compressed. My Samsung Note 10+ has 60 fps HEVC hardware encoder and it works great. well, I've used it since 2004 and have a lot of games and because.

I've had no problems with GoG games - but I don't have many of those, Steam just. So, yeah, I'm talking here about relatively recent games and totally about game companies such as Rockstar. but hell, to me, it seems the only real winner for Linux gaming is Steam - and let's face it, is is Valve who have pushed Linux gaming forward to where it is now. I've still got my windows partition on my Linux gaming rig - haven't booted it for a year now. Sure, Rockstar games are notoriously fickle on Linux - but Valve have managed it. My point is, there's just so many variables of what can go wrong, without a company behind the effort.Ĭommunity software is _awesome_ and Lutris is _awsome_ - but it just cannot compete with the likes of Valve - the reason being obvious - Steam Deck. I've spent another day, more or less, trying to figure it out, but I'm no closer.
#Xinput test unhandled exception upgrade
Last week, I decided to upgrade to Pop!_OS 22.04 - and it screwed my rdr2 install. I was using Pop!_OS 21.04 - it took me about 2 days on and off, to actually get it working - but once I did, it ran *perfectly*, which is no small feat, given the volume of issues I've seen. I've just had a very frustrating time with Lutris.Ībout 6 months back, I managed to get red dead redemption II (rdr2) working with Lutris - I'd purchased it via Rockstar, way back - special offer.
