- Joined
- Dec 1, 2018
Mint should have never touched the win7 drive. Do you not have an option to boot it in grub? What was the game that doesn't work, anyway?I just started using Linux Mint Cinnamon and in kind of struggling. It's my first time using Linux after dabbling with it in a virtualbox, and I really wanted to get away from Windows products and especially Windows 10. I got a roomy new 2TB SSD and with a little effort got Mint running on it. I also actually kinda like doing stuff from the command line, when I was a kid my dad used MS-DOS for years so that was my first experience with computers until he upgraded to Windows 3.1.
The first thing I wanted to do was install a game. This is a game that's known to run well on Linux and has several different methods of installing and running it on Linux, you can do it through Lutris, Steam, etc. After several hours of trying different methods that didn't work I got it installed, but it runs like garbage, which isn't supposed to happen. I didn't expect everything to be ez pz but this was a little more of a struggle than I thought it would be and I spend a lot of time in this game so it's a big deal if it's not playable.
Migrating from one Windows to another is hell I wouldn't wish on anyone. Given the option I would always try to ghetto rig my current install working again, no matter what it takes. Fwiw in my experience because it's a paradigm shift everything in *nix seems much more difficult and insurmountable than it really actually is for the first week-to-month. I as a rule caution patience for that reason (same as I would for Mac or BSD), but you know your situation better than I.So now I'm wondering if I should partition the SSD and try to get Windows 8 running on another partition and just ditch both the other hard drives, stick with Windows for now, and dabble in Linux when I feel like it. Would this be the most reasonable thing to do? Or am I letting myself be too easily deterred?
Didn't consider this. Always switch to legacy bios if you can. I wouldn't be surprised if it's UEFI that's fucking you.Are you using UEFI? Multi-booting with multiple drives seems to be an absolute nightmare in my experience. I'd say do anything else but that. One drive with multiple partitions, one OS running in a VM inside the other, or just two completely separate computers.