The gaming-focused Linux distribution Bazzite has seen over one petabyte of ISO downloads in the past month, as users seek alternatives to Windows 11's forced updates. Developers highlight this surge as a safe haven for Windows 10 users avoiding upgrades. The distro, built on Fedora, offers seamless gaming and desktop features.
Bazzite, a gaming-first Linux distribution derived from Fedora Kinoite, has experienced a massive uptick in popularity, with developers reporting over one petabyte of Bazzite ISOs downloaded in the last month. This equates to 1,000,000 GB, underscoring the distro's appeal amid Microsoft's push for Windows 11 updates, which many Windows 10 users are resisting.
The surge positions Bazzite as a refuge for those fleeing forced upgrades. As noted by Tom's Hardware, it serves as 'another safe haven for Win 10 refugees.' Bazzite simplifies gaming and everyday use across desktops, handhelds, tablets, and home theater PCs, according to official materials.
Key features include pre-installed Steam, Proton, Lutris, and Protontricks for easy game compatibility. It supports HDR, VRR, improved CPU schedulers, and controllers from Xbox, Wii, Switch, PS3/4/5, and others. Latest NVIDIA and Mesa drivers ensure compatibility with AMD and Intel hardware, plus Waydroid for Android apps and Homebrew.
As an image-based, immutable OS using KDE Plasma or GNOME, Bazzite mounts the core system in read-only mode for enhanced security. Updates can be rolled back via Btrfs snapshots, managed through the included Btrfs Assistant tool. Reviewers praise its seamless Steam integration, with games like Albion Online running smoothly after quick downloads. Beyond gaming, Flatpak and the Bazaar app store enable easy installation of productivity apps, while Distroshelf allows containerized Linux distributions.
This download milestone reflects growing interest in Linux gaming options, boosted by hardware like the upcoming Steam Machine.