Arch Linux Pascal GPU dropout: Boot failures and community fixes

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.

NVIDIA's latest Linux drivers, now default in Arch Linux via version 590, no longer support Pascal architecture GPUs such as the GTX 10xx series, as previously covered. A December 26, 2025, report details how OS updates on affected hardware fail to load drivers, booting users to the CLI.

Brodie Robertson's recent video spotlights the issue, recommending the legacy NVIDIA driver from the Arch User Repository (AUR), maintained by ventureo of the CachyOS project. This keeps older cards functional but breaks dependencies for apps like Steam, requiring Arch Wiki tweaks to resolve.

The open-source Nouveau driver offers a basic alternative, though with inferior performance. Arch Linux's news post from mid-December outlined steps for 10xx and older cards amid the transition to open kernel modules.

Critics decry NVIDIA's short support cycles as planned obsolescence, while some defend Arch's handling and push for open-source drivers or hardware upgrades.

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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.

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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.

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