Obviously this is a long shot but is there any way to get game pass working on Linux? I realise most of the games can be played through steam but it is a good way to try out new games cheaply
Unless I missed something recently, I think not (unless maybe a W10 VM works for you?). With CPU-bundled AMD gamepass I know many people had a reason to be interested, such as myself who had the bundle in 2019 and never redeemed it because of the lack of support.
I think at one point I may have read something about dual-boot (again, a big maybe), assuming the game you want is not UWP and you're willing to install it in Windows and move it.
Also when searching that, I did see someone mention streaming from W10 to Linux, so that may be a (not-ideal) option.
I'm happy to run a VM if the performance is ok, problem is then I've gotta figure out GPU virtualization/passthrough which I believe is possible with my GPU. It's either that or I use their streaming service
Dual booting is a last resort, I switched to Linux for a reason, I've got used to it now and am unwilling to switch back on bare metal.
VFIO machine will real gpu works as expected - perfect. Native options are years away if any - nobody seems to work in cracking uwp to get running under wine... and honestly I'm not surprised.
Yeah that's your best bet. Do you have two GPUs? If so it's pretty easy to do GPU pass through, if you only have one though you'll have to do single gpu pass through which is a bit of a pain
I don't have two GPUs no, I don't quite get how it seems so many people have multiple in their machines it doesn't really give any benefit to gaming as far as I've heard besides virtualization
Integrated graphics also work, if you have those which would technically count as a GPU. If not, I would look into just dualvooting tbh, as imo dual booting had about the same boot speeds as a vm with single GPU passthrough but without any of the quircks and restrictions a VM will have (since with single gpu pass through you can only run the VM or Linux not both at once)
Yeah that's the issue, I don't want to at any point be running Windows as the main operating system. My laptop is dual booted as I need windows for work sometimes but otherwise I'd like to keep windows as minimal as possible
Dual booting obviously has the best performance because you're just running the os bare metal the same way you would of it was installed normally, but I just really don't want to have windows running bare metal
There is apparently a way to virtualize some Nvidia GPUs so that's probably the route I'll end up taking
Even with single gpu pass through by "main" I meant you just won't be able to use Linux until you close it, it will still be in a container and can't fuck up anything (unless you give it access to).