Steam Has Brought 1,600 Games To Linux In the Past Three Years (phoronix.com)
An anonymous reader writes: Today marks three years since Valve's Steam client went into beta on Linux. In that time over 1,600 games have become natively available for Linux. Going beyond having many new Linux games, Phoronix recaps, "we've seen Valve make significant investments into the open-source graphics stack and other areas of Linux (in part through their sponsorship of Collabora and LunarG). Valve developers are significantly pushing SDL2. We've seen more mainstream interest in Linux gaming, and Valve has been heavily involved in the creation of the Vulkan graphics API. They have given away their entire game collection to the Mesa/Ubuntu/Debian upstream developers, and much more." The three-year anniversary is coincidentally just days before the release of Steam Machines.
I suggest you peruse the actual lists once in a while:
https://steamdb.info/linux/
Although "big-studio" games are largely absent, an awful lot of top-end indie games are there. Indie doesn't always mean shite in a bundle, by the way.
Killing Floor, X3, Civ, Bioshock, Trine and all kinds of other games are well worth the money.
And there are definitely more of them lately, and bigger titles are getting more attention since Valve started their Linux port.
Unless Valve wants to pull a little "Chromebook" move, say a switch that swaps between console mode and desktop mode and suddenly you have an alternate desktop for basic use.
Last time I checked, SteamOS had exactly such a switch: Exit to GNOME.