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TLDR: If you like massive multiplayer games, those might not work. Most of the rest will if using compatibility settings in steam.
I would say it depends on the game and platform: most games I play in Steam are just install and play, sometimes I just need to activate the compatibility options.
https://protondb.com is a fantastic trove of info for how to play most games. Though it might not cover them all as I was told, that hasn't been my case.
Lutris, on the other hand is a bit tougher as you said, and sometimes certain games require some time investment to run.
That said, I don't play massive multiplayer games that might require anticheat and those won't work on linux AFAIT.
I don't play any MMOs, and this laptop won't have any games, other than maybe Factorio to test down the road. It's pretty much an extra laptop I have laying around to see if I can get a Linux OS set up.
Thanks for the link though. If I do ever set up Linux on my main gaming rig, I'll be sure to refer to the link.
Factorio in particular actually ships a native Linux version. Someone at Wube actually tries it AFAICT. So that should be something you could try day one, probably. Besides some weird situation, I'd expect every other game to be harder to run than Factorio.
I didn't try many but for what it's worth GW2 works flawlessly through Steam or Lutris
I think a lot do, but as I don't play them and most people complaint about anticheat being the heel in linux gaming...
I played many but that's before I switched - so far only played GW2 and Albion Online (which has Linux client so goes without saying it works)
Now I'm thinking I might try out a couple again just to test how some of them function.