Nosferatu, I'm with you there.
Deidel, after watching you struggle with your new Suse 10.1 x86_64 install, I'm pretty disappointed with Suse. But you're on the right track. I'll be the first to say \"don't use Linux\" if it's not going to meet your needs. It's just a tool, after all. I never was what you'd call an \"Avid\" gamer. So I switched because:
1. I had already spent about 3 years \"messing\" with it, and was familiar enough to use it daily
2. I found a handful of games that ran great on it, which is enough for as often as I get to play them (D3 being the best! Of course)
3. Linux came with apps to do everything I really needed to do. Supported my hardware, HTML, graphics, surfing, audio work, media management, Office, etc.
4. I was willing to do without the (few) things that I couldn't have, in order to not worry about viruses, etc. In return, I've had a wonderful experience with it.
Geez, what is it about Linux that gets me talking?
Anyway, the bottom line is, I have much respect for anybody who looks at an OS choice objectively, and makes a decision based on what they actually need, not just \"Windows/Linux/OSX sucks, I won't use it.\" Deidel, I seriously hope you get the bugs worked out with your Linux install. I think you'll learn a lot from the experience (once you get a distro working right). I don't know of too many people who've had the problems you've had. Like with cars, every now and then even good cars make a lemon.
And for the record, I just finished building a Win98 machine just for playing older games (specifically ones that have a hard time with WinXP). Rocket Jockey, Rally Championship, the Mech4 series, and a pile of emulators and older games for the kids. For a game computer, it fits my needs. Will I put it on the network? Hell no.