I recently switched my entertainment laptop to Linux after having my work devices on it for a few years.

The laptop has a Gforce 1050 Max-Q in it. I’m trying to run games from Steam that officially don’t support Linux.

If I set the PRIME profile in the Nvidia control panel to “Nvidia only”, everything works as expected.

But if I set the profile to “On demand”, the whole system freezes a few seconds after I open a game.

I read some vague comment on Reddit saying it might have something to do with me using KDE.

If I run it on the Intel GPU, it works no matter what profile is set (but super slow).

The system is freshly installed using the proprietary Nvidia driver version 535.

Does anyone have an idea what could be wrong?

  • Rudee@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Not an expert, but to me it sounds like the issue is that “on demand” uses the iGPU for regular desktop parts and calls for the dGPU when you switch to something requiring more horsepower

    The problem with this might be that the execution of this is slow and there’s a few seconds between the iGPU switching off and the dGPU switching on

    • Square Singer@feddit.deOP
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      1 year ago

      Yeah, that is what on demand is supposed to do. But when it freezes, the game already started and rendered the first few seconds on the dGPU. One time I managed to play for ~10 minutes before the freeze.

      And it remains frozen. I once waited for ~1h and it didn’t recover.