Your question is a bit of a paradox. The simplest answer is to say that you can’t. “Gaming” just means using the propriatery software a company built, and online gaming also means connecting to their server (unless you emulate your own, but that’s becoming more rare these days).
But the longer and more fair answer is to say that absolute privacy isn’t necessarily realistic or desirable for all, and you are looking for the best compromise that works for you.
If using linux is important to you, I think valve has been doing a very good job porting a lot of their library and making it compatible with linux through proton. I used that for a while, but I have to say I didn’t like the bunch of random files games would pollute my system with.
I guess my suggestion would be to have a dedicated system for gaming (either by dual-booting, or a vm with pci passthrough for performance, or a different system altogether like another pc or steam Deck). Only use an identity meant for gaming with that system, and keep practicing a healthy separation of concerns there.
Finally as a game dev, I will invite you to not pirate games you like, especially from smaller creators.
Your question is a bit of a paradox. The simplest answer is to say that you can’t. “Gaming” just means using the propriatery software a company built, and online gaming also means connecting to their server (unless you emulate your own, but that’s becoming more rare these days).
But the longer and more fair answer is to say that absolute privacy isn’t necessarily realistic or desirable for all, and you are looking for the best compromise that works for you.
If using linux is important to you, I think valve has been doing a very good job porting a lot of their library and making it compatible with linux through proton. I used that for a while, but I have to say I didn’t like the bunch of random files games would pollute my system with.
I guess my suggestion would be to have a dedicated system for gaming (either by dual-booting, or a vm with pci passthrough for performance, or a different system altogether like another pc or steam Deck). Only use an identity meant for gaming with that system, and keep practicing a healthy separation of concerns there.
Finally as a game dev, I will invite you to not pirate games you like, especially from smaller creators.