proton

  1. Steam Machine and SteamOS: Kernel Anti-Cheat Barriers to Linux Multiplayer

    Valve’s new Steam Machine promises console‑style convenience with PC performance, but the one‑line truth for multiplayer fans is blunt: the Steam Machine will inherit the Steam Deck’s anti‑cheat problem unless publishers, anti‑cheat vendors and Valve change course — and right now the technical...
  2. Linux Gaming Surges as Steam Deck Pushes SteamOS Past 3% (Oct 2025)

    The Steam community’s October 2025 snapshot finally pushed Linux over the psychological 3% mark on Valve’s monthly Hardware & Software Survey, a milestone that matters because it’s driven largely by Valve’s own Steam Deck ecosystem and the continuing expansion of SteamOS Holo—an outcome that...
  3. AI Travel Planning Risks: Hallucinations, Safety, and Smart Use Guidelines

    An imagined canyon in the Peruvian Andes, a phantom Eiffel Tower in Beijing and a stranded couple waiting for a ropeway that never ran: recent reporting shows that letting generative AI plan a trip can produce more than awkward suggestions — it can be actively dangerous, confusing and expensive...
  4. Linux Gaming Reaches 90% of Windows Titles with Proton

    Linux gaming has reached a milestone: community data shows roughly nine out of ten Windows games can now be launched on Linux systems using modern compatibility layers, and the share of titles that run cleanly without fiddling has grown steadily — a fact that reshapes how players, developers...
  5. Valve Ends Steam Support on 32-bit Windows by Jan 2026

    Valve has set a firm deadline: beginning January 1, 2026, the Steam desktop client will no longer be supported on 32‑bit versions of Windows — a move that freezes the client on any remaining Windows 10 32‑bit installations and pushes the platform fully onto a 64‑bit baseline. Background The...
  6. Linux Gains Momentum as Windows 10 EOL Nears, Not a Mass Exodus

    A surprising pattern is emerging as the Windows 10 end‑of‑support deadline approaches: publicly available telemetry and independent trackers show measurable growth in Linux desktop usage, while community projects, vendors, and security firms are actively encouraging migration — but the evidence...
  7. Steam Ends 32-bit Windows Support in 2026: How to Migrate Now

    Valve has set a firm deadline: beginning January 1, 2026, the Steam desktop client will no longer be supported on 32‑bit editions of Windows — effectively ending the platform’s last mainstream accommodation for 32‑bit Windows and giving the tiny remaining cohort of users a hard migration clock...
  8. Valve Ends Steam Support for 32-Bit Windows by Jan 1, 2026

    Valve will stop supporting Steam on 32‑bit editions of Windows on January 1, 2026, a move aimed at simplifying engineering, reducing security risk, and aligning the platform with the 64‑bit baseline that now dominates the PC ecosystem. Background The PC ecosystem completed its long migration...
  9. Steam Ends 32-Bit Windows Support on Jan 1, 2026 — What to Do

    Valve has put a firm date on the end of an era: beginning January 1, 2026, Steam will stop supporting 32‑bit editions of Windows — a move that is technically predictable, low‑impact for the vast majority of users, but urgent and potentially disruptive for the small cohort still running Windows...
  10. Steam Ends 32-bit Windows Support by Jan 2026: Plan Your Migration

    Valve will stop supporting 32‑bit versions of Windows for the Steam client on January 1, 2026, effectively ending official updates, security patches, and technical support for the tiny slice of users still running Windows 10 32‑bit; existing Steam installations may continue to launch for a time...
  11. Steam ends 32-bit Windows support in 2026: plan your 64-bit migration

    Valve’s Steam client will stop supporting 32‑bit versions of Windows on January 1, 2026 — a change that’s technically sensible, strategically predictable, and narrowly impactful for most players, but which carries an outsized risk for the small group still running Windows 10 (32‑bit) unless...
  12. Valve Ends Steam Support for Windows 10 32-bit (Jan 2026) — 64-bit Only

    Valve will stop supporting Steam on 32‑bit Windows systems on January 1, 2026 — a move that affects a vanishingly small slice of the PC gaming population but signals a permanent industry shift away from 32‑bit desktop platforms and toward exclusive 64‑bit support. Background The end of Steam's...
  13. Steam to drop 32-bit Windows support on Jan 1, 2026: migration guide

    Valve’s Steam client will stop receiving updates for 32‑bit editions of Windows on January 1, 2026, a decision that closes the last active chapter of 32‑bit Windows support on Steam and forces a small but real group of users to plan migrations, backups, or hardware replacements. Background Steam...
  14. Steam ends 32-bit Windows support by Jan 1, 2026 — what you need to do

    Steam's desktop client is set to stop supporting 32‑bit editions of Windows on January 1, 2026, a move that will leave the tiny cohort of Steam users still running 32‑bit Windows without future client updates, security fixes, or official Steam support for OS‑specific issues. Background Steam's...
  15. Valve to End Steam Support for Windows 32-bit by Jan 1, 2026

    Valve is preparing to stop supporting 32‑bit editions of Windows — specifically Windows 10 (32‑bit) — on January 1, 2026, a move that will end official Steam client updates and platform support for the tiny fraction of Steam users still running a 32‑bit Windows host. Background Windows 10...
  16. Steam to drop 32-bit Windows support on Jan 1, 2026: migration guide

    Valve’s Steam platform is slated to stop supporting 32‑bit Windows systems on January 1, 2026, a move reported by multiple outlets and grounded in Steam’s hardware telemetry and past deprecation practice. Background / Overview Steam’s gradual retirement of legacy operating systems is not new...
  17. Steam to End Windows 32-bit Support by Jan 2026: What You Need to Know

    Steam will stop supporting Windows 32‑bit installations on January 1, 2026, a move that, if confirmed and implemented as reported, will leave the vanishingly small number of users still running Windows 10 in its 32‑bit form without client updates, security fixes, or official Steam Support help —...
  18. Switch Windows to Linux Mint: A Practical, Safe Migration Guide

    If you’re staring at a Windows 10 machine that’s nearing the end of support — or you simply tried Windows 11 and didn’t like it — switching to a free, user-friendly Linux distribution like Linux Mint is a practical alternative that can revive older hardware, protect your privacy, and get you...
  19. Switching from Windows to Linux: 7 Windows-like Distros for 2025

    If Windows 10’s end-of-support deadline has you weighing alternatives, you’re not alone — and Linux is no longer the alien landscape it was a decade ago. ZDNET’s roundup of “Windows-like” Linux distributions highlights seven desktop-focused distros designed to flatten the learning curve for...
  20. Nobara 42: The Gamer-First Fedora-Based Linux Distro

    Nobara’s newest release lands as a practical, gamer-friendly variation on Fedora that removes the usual post-install friction for players — but it does so by making deliberate trade-offs that every new user should understand before switching. Background Fedora has long been respected for its...