[-] GreenMinusBlue@lemmy.zip 1 points 1 week ago

Yeah youre right i tried Gemini and it hallucinated the results and keep saying its an Nvidia graphics card and giving wrong metrics again and again. Im looking for help to manually extract the information. But its a bit hard work, there is many videos. Thanks for commenting.

[-] GreenMinusBlue@lemmy.zip 1 points 1 week ago

Would love to try, i want the data to be available outside of YouTube if possible. Thanks for commenting

[-] GreenMinusBlue@lemmy.zip 2 points 1 week ago

From the time we used Wine instead of Proton :)

[-] GreenMinusBlue@lemmy.zip 0 points 1 week ago

Thanks a lot for that, but it seems users or videos are limited to 100GB and my content is generally at least 40-60GB each

[-] GreenMinusBlue@lemmy.zip 1 points 1 week ago

Because i made the mistake of not recording the data itself. Into csv format or something similar. I should have done that, now im kind of stuck with Gemini being the only llm able to read and analyze youtube videos. I could perhaps extract mangohud data that way. Not sure, im just an linux enthusiast. Not yet a hardcore linux power user, but i hope to change that. Thanks for commenting.

[-] GreenMinusBlue@lemmy.zip 1 points 1 week ago

Yes, already working on getting all stats extracted from the videos, into other formats. Thanks for commenting

[-] GreenMinusBlue@lemmy.zip 0 points 1 week ago

I can respect that, good security practice. No worries. My enthusiasm for Linux and gaming is what made me share, thats all. Have a great day

-1

Hey Linux Gaming Community,

Kind of new to Lemmy, i already posted elsewhere but this is actually the place i wanted it to be. Definetly prefer Lemmy over something like Reddit and its alternatives.

Anyway i've been quietly benchmarking 700+ games on Linux with full MangoHud data (frametime, 1% lows, VRAM) across CachyOS, Fedora, and Kubuntu. Not gameplay footage - actual performance data. Figured this community might find it useful somehow. Channel link : https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCNq7pDavJRTEjg3AOdcuMAg

[-] GreenMinusBlue@lemmy.zip 1 points 2 weeks ago

I've got some genuinely weird data that i would like too add. I think some might also find interesting to discuss:

I call it : The 15K anomaly — I benchmark at resolutions up to 15K (yes, fifteen thousand pixels wide). Some games run better at 15K than at 6K on the same hardware. The math doesn't work. I still don't fully understand why. GPU utilization seems the same, but FPS goes up. From 20-30 FPS in 4-6K to 30-40 FPS in 15K (upscaled, not native) Proof in the link here : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MJQomo8CbmU

8

I've been running gaming benchmarks on Fedora, CachyOS, etc. With an RX 7900 XT at 6016x3384 (Apple Pro Display XDR) for the past few years. Over 700 games tested with MangoHud overlays showing FPS/frametimes and more. As far as I can tell, this is the only dataset of its kind - most benchmarks cap at 4K, and almost none test native Linux (vs Windows or Proton comparisons). I'm trying to figure out how to make this more useful to the community. Currently it's all on YouTube (channel: GreenMinusBlue), but I'm working on extracting the raw data into a searchable format. Questions for the community:

Would a structured dataset (CSV/JSON) be useful to anyone? Any games you'd want to see tested at extreme resolutions? Best way to preserve this kind of data long-term?

GreenMinusBlue

joined 2 weeks ago