If it ain't on steam, I don't play it, and they don't get my money.
If it ain't on steam, I don't play it, and they don't get my money.
Games don’t need to be on Steam to be good.
If the developers have a native Linux version that I can buy directly from their site, I might do that as well to show my support (but still buy it on steam since it's just too convenient).
In my experience 99% of the games work out of the box with wine-staging, DXVK and VKD3D-Proton (which works with wine-staging just fine). No need to mess around with anything, just install wine-string, install DXVK and VKD3D-Proton and you are ready to run pretty much everything with "wine installername.exe" or "wine gamebinary.exe".
I never had to use winetricks, lutris or anything of the sort.
I also play games on Steam and even got a Steam Deck (on which i also play games i got outside from Steam), so it isn't like i am Valve-free, but you certainly do not have to tie yourself on Steam if you are gaming on Linux nor your experience will be any worse.
You had to go to WineHQ, look at the open issues and workarounds, and often troubleshoot issues yourself.
Lutris made the process a bit easier and then Proton made it absurdly easier.
The problem with Proton is that Steam Input is not well implemented.