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.