Hey everyone! I'm super fed up with Windows 11 on my laptop and thinking about making the switch to a Linux distro. I've dabbled with Linux in the past (including Arch during my computer science days), but now that I'm in law school, I don't have much time to customize everything. I'm looking for something that works smoothly out of the box.
The reason for the switch is that I have an eGPU (Gigabyte NVIDIA RTX 2060) that I used for gaming, but I've been running into power management issues with Windows 11. I can force a high-performance mode, but it really drains my battery and makes my laptop super hot.
Here are my laptop specs if that helps:
- Model: Framework 13"
- Processor: AMD Ryzen 5 7640U with Radeon 760M iGPU
- RAM: 32 GB
- Storage: 2 TB Samsung SSD
- eGPU Dock: AOOSTAR AG02
Ideally, I'd like a distro that: 1) supports my NVIDIA eGPU, 2) provides decent battery life for regular tasks, and 3) just generally works well on my machine. Any recommendations? Thanks!
4 Answers
Honestly, most distros will handle your hardware pretty similarly. It’s all about picking a good power management tool for battery life vs performance. If you want ease of use, Arch and its derivatives can be really nice, though they might require a bit more setup than others.
Check out the wiki's distro selection page for more guidance on what might work best for you! Also, don't forget to back up your data and play around with a VM to get comfortable.
I'm also interested in eGPUs! If I connect one to Linux, will I be able to choose to run specific games on it? Is there some setting in Steam for that, or does it depend on the game itself? My setup is a bit older and only has USB2 ports, will that be an issue?
Framework laptops have solid Linux support! Most distros like Linux Mint, Ubuntu, Fedora, Pop!_OS, and Zorin OS should work pretty well with your setup. You might want to try a few and see which one feels best for you!
Good to know! I was worried about whether all those distros would handle eGPU support equally.

Yeah, for eGPU support, you'd need at least Thunderbolt 4 or USB4; USB2 won't cut it for gaming.