Arch Linux users hit by boot issues after Nvidia drops Pascal support

Arch Linux users with Pascal GPUs are experiencing widespread boot failures and black screens following the distribution's adoption of Nvidia's 590 series Linux drivers, which ended support for older hardware. Officials recommend legacy drivers as a fix.

As covered in prior reporting on Nvidia's shift away from Pascal GPUs in its Linux drivers, the 590.44.01 release—incorporated into Arch Linux repositories in mid-December 2025—has caused significant disruptions for users of GTX 10xx series cards and older architectures like Maxwell.

Systems fail to boot graphically, dropping to command-line mode. Arch Linux's official announcement urges affected users to uninstall standard Nvidia packages and install legacy options such as nvidia-580xx-dkms from the AUR, a process requiring recovery mode that has proven frustrating.

Community backlash is intense: a Reddit r/archlinux thread on the issue garnered hundreds of comments, with users lamenting GTX 1080 Ti cards becoming 'liabilities overnight.' The Steam Hardware Survey indicates 6% of gamers still rely on Pascal, hitting budget users and emerging markets hard. Impacts extend to CUDA-dependent tools like MATLAB, disrupting AI and machine learning work.

Nvidia's prioritization of open kernel modules for Turing and newer GPUs aligns with its AI and ray-tracing focus and 80%+ discrete GPU market share, but leaves legacy users vulnerable without security updates. Critics reference historical tensions, including Linus Torvalds' past critiques of Nvidia's proprietary drivers. Alternatives like the Nouveau open-source driver underperform, prompting suggestions to migrate to AMD or Intel for better Linux support. Arch maintainers emphasize user responsibility with detailed guides, but the episode fuels demands for improved vendor coordination.

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Nvidia is reportedly preparing to launch native support for its GeForce Now cloud gaming service on Linux operating systems later in 2026. This move aims to eliminate the need for workarounds currently used by Linux users, including those on Steam Deck. The announcement comes amid speculation and a separate controversy over a new playtime cap.

Following Arch Linux's shift to NVIDIA driver 590 dropping Pascal GPU support, users report boot failures to the command line after updates. Community workarounds via legacy AUR packages exist but complicate gaming setups like Steam, as highlighted by tech commentator Brodie Robertson.

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Arch Linux's recent switch to the NVIDIA 590 driver has disrupted systems for users with older graphics cards, dropping support for Pascal and earlier architectures. The change pushes legacy drivers to the Arch User Repository, requiring manual fixes for affected hardware. Newer GPUs transition smoothly to open kernel modules.

Linux graphics developers have submitted patches to address virtual memory faults plaguing older AMD GCN GPUs. These fixes aim to enhance stability for cards like the HD 7000 and R9 290 series during Vulkan workloads. The changes come ahead of the Linux Kernel 6.19 release.

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Arch Linux has released its January 2026 ISO snapshot (2026.01.01), featuring Linux kernel 6.18 LTS for better hardware support, the recently updated Archinstall 3.0.15 installer, and December 2025 package security updates. Ideal for new installations on modern hardware.

Following performance boosts in Linux 6.19, developers plan additional improvements for older AMD graphics cards, with updates arriving throughout 2026 to ensure long-term compatibility in open-source environments.

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The upcoming Linux 6.19 kernel introduces a significant performance upgrade for older AMD Radeon graphics cards by defaulting to the modern AMDGPU driver. This change, enabled by recent improvements from Valve engineers, delivers around a 30% boost in performance for GCN 1.0 and 1.1 GPUs. Users of legacy hardware like the Radeon HD 7950 can now access better features, including out-of-the-box Vulkan support.

 

 

 

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