Is there a way to add a custom screen resolution of 1440x960 to Linux Mint/Ubuntu
So this week I got myself a Framework 13. I am so far liking it, especially with Linux Mint. But I feel the push for high resolutions is pushing the poor iGPU a bit too hard in games.
But since I got the 2880x1920 display, it can be downscaled to 1440x960 without too much loss of quality. However the closest resolution I can find to it is 1440x900, which breaks my desktop icons, and other applications which wants to use the full screen.
Am I just stuck with the default or am I just missing something?
EDIT: Attempt #1: Tried Gamescope, wasn't apart of the included packages on Mint. Tried to build, failed, tried to cleanup, borked my install, had to restore from previous day's backup. Not doing that again.
Unfortunately I cannot install gamescope, running Linux mint, and it is not apart of the packages. And the build instructions requires multiple library downgrades, and when it was done, it spat out a Wayland error.]
I believe this is also relevant for Ubuntu 24.04 as well.
EDIT: Oh and after a reset I borked my Mint install. Thank you snapshots for the rescue
On the note of FSR. I unify all my games in heroic launcher. Some older games I have been playing that only have resolution options up to 1080p I set them at that. Then set forced FSR in the heroic launcher settings to my native 1440p. No more slightly blurry games. Mind you they aren't very graphically intensive games but that may be another option ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
You probably know this, but for those who don't; that is only FSR 1.0, which is generally not very good but can still be much better than a basic upscaler. If the game has native FSR support, you should always use that instead.
Wayland support in Mint is very early stages and doesn't seem like much of a priority, as at this point its considered "experimental".
You'd have a lot better luck with pretty near anything else thats been working with Wayland for a long time, like Fedora, Ubuntu, Arch, etc. Plasma is probably a better substitute for Gnome when you're coming off Cinnamon but both should let you use custom resolutions out of the box.