Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.

Here are the latest results from the monthly GOL survey. These results are from the survey filled out this month in relation to March.Sadly a drop in responses this month, I am still bordering on doing this less frequently to prevent people burning out on it.Still as healthy as ever, but who really doubted this coming from a Linux gaming website?Still quite a large amount of people using Wine and it's not surprising. Wine really is an amazing bit of software and I do enjoy seeing it mature as time goes on.I am still personally clinging onto my Windows partitions, mainly for testing performance of games and the odd big title I can't part ways with (don't hurt me!). I personally haven't needed to boot into Windows to play games for months—thanks mainly to XCOM 2.People like to argue that Ubuntu isn't the most popular distribution around, but no one can ever back it up. While this lumps together debian based distributions, I imagine the picture wouldn't be too different if Ubuntu was by itself. What I may do in future, is have Debian by itself since offshoots like Ubuntu aren't really the same, not sure on that really. It wouldn't make sense to split up the smaller distributions, but the ones more likely to be used could be fun to split up to see some more accurate statistics.Really good to see such a healthy amount of people using 64bit, there's really little reason to continue using 32bit unless your hardware really is that old.I am very excited to see what happens to this graph after the release of the new AMD processors. I'm hoping AMD manage to become competitive again at the mid-high end so more people will be likely to buy them, especially if the price is good.Considering the price of a semi-decent racing wheel, I'm really not surprised it's as low as it is. Something really for full driving enthusiasts I guess.Again, this is something that isn't at all surprising. Screens that are only 1080p are dirt cheap, and 4K screens really haven't hit that sweet spot for price point. Not only that, but 4K gaming on Linux really isn't all that great. Not just gaming, but many applications still don't scale well, or scale at all (like Steam).This one is weird, the amount of people using Steam seems to have dropped. I was thinking it was originally a blip, but the trend has continued. A lower drop than before though.This isn't surprising at all, given that a lot of people that visit GOL are quite Linux-savvy most of us already have beefy gaming computers, or like me, built their own Steam Machine.Many thanks once again to Feds for doing the graphs, and thank you to all who participate in the survey.