

I’m curious, what exactly makes Bazzite a gaming-focused distribution? Like, it comes with Steam preloaded, I’m guessing, are there other aspects to it?
As you correctly guessed already, indeed, Steam is included by default. Beyond that, we got some of the usual suspects:
- A lot of other OOTB enabling (like e.g. OOTB Nvidia driver support, controller support etc) that one might like on a system used for gaming
- The use of another kernel + scheduler (and probs more) for improved gaming performance
- Depending on the image you install, you get Steam Gaming Mode OOTB; i.e. the UI found on the Steam Deck
- It’s perfectly suited for the console experience, because of how seamless everything works by virtue of the automatic updates in the background + updates being atomic + built-in rollback functionality + the amount of control the
bootc
model gives for image management to the image maintainers
It does a whole lot more than that, but the above should probs suffice.
I used to distro-hop a bit back in the late 00s, and while it was fun to see what the different distributions bundled and whatnot, it never felt like something was particularly suited for one thing or another.
Hmm…, FWIW, Ubuntu Studio has been around since 2007. I suppose it’s basically the same idea, but directed towards creative use rather than gaming.
I’m now on OpenSuSE Tumbleweed, and it’s just… Linux, I guess? I play games on it, VR, what have you, and it does what I want it to.
To be clear, Bazzite can perfectly work as a general use computer; especially for those that appreciate the bootc
model but would like to consume it through a popular ‘image’.
Sure, some packages are outdated. But in terms of percentage of up-to-date packages, it’s (AFAIK) the best out of any distro repo. And that’s perhaps even more impressive of a feat when realizing it also sports the biggest repo. For actual stats: https://repology.org/repositories/statistics/pnewest