In addition to the SteamOS alignment roadmap, the Bazzite April 2026 update includes Mesa 26.0.4, a new version of the OGC kernel, serious reductions in image size, and a six-point roadmap for Bazzite's alignment with Valve's SteamOS for handheld gaming on Linux in 2026.
- Kernel
6.19.10 OGCand Mesa 26.0.4 were shipped to the:testingbranch in Bazzite Linux April 2026 update for desktop users immediately. - Base images lost around 1GB after QEMU and ROCM were repositioned to Bazzite-DX along with a brand-new rechunker engine being active right now. A new version of Red Hat's Chunkah project, using ZSTD compression is due shortly.
- Real security teeth come into play: SBOMs can now drive changelogs, Build Attestation is activated, OpenSSF scanning run on each build, and ISOs are signed.
- Additional wins for Hardware include: Native Elgato 4K capture card support; expanded Steering Wheel Driver support; and new ASUS Linux / ASUSCtl patches for ROG Handheld Owners.
- Additionally, there was a six-point SteamOS Alignment Roadmap created for Bazzite to cover the following items: An OpenGamepadUI Overlay; In-Steam Changelogs; Gamescope Nvidia Streaming; TDP control through SteamOS Manager; and Legion GO 2 Fixes via Input Plumber.
What Happened
Bazzite Linux April 2026 Update: One of the Most Powerful Yet
The Universal Blue Project released one of the largest updates to date on Bazzite Linux today. The Bazzite Linux April 2026 update went live for desktop users on April 10, 2026 on the Testing Branch, and the sheer volume of changes made to the kernel, graphics stack, image delivery pipeline, security chain, hardware support, and handheld game mode experience is impressive. This update makes a strong statement for anyone seeking the best Linux distro for handheld gaming 2026.
Kyle Gospo, Project Lead for the Universal Blue Community Forums said, "This is a two-story announcement: What we are deploying today to Desktop Users in our Testing Branch, and Where We Are Headed Next With Our Six Point SteamOS Alignment Roadmap." Both stories are important for everyone involved. They are discussed below.
At a Glance
What's New in Bazzite Linux 2026: In Testing Now vs Coming Soon
| Feature | In Testing Now | Coming Soon |
|---|---|---|
| Kernel | 6.19.10 OGC (gaming-tuned patches) | Fedora 44 base + OGC for deck images |
| Graphics Stack | Mesa 26.0.4 | Bundled with Bazzite 44 stable |
| Image Size | ~1GB reduction, new rechunker live | Red Hat Chunkah + ZSTD compression |
| Security | SBOMs, Build Attestation, OpenSSF, signed ISOs | Expanded across deck images |
| Hardware | Elgato 4K, steering wheels, ASUSCtl patches | Legion GO 2 + Input Plumber fixes |
| Game Mode Overlay | Not yet | OpenGamepadUI-based overlay |
| Steam Update Changelogs | Not yet | Accurate changelogs in Steam UI |
| TDP Control | Not yet | Via SteamOS-Manager + PowerStation |
| Gamescope Nvidia Streaming | Not yet | Fixed in upcoming gamescope build |
| Sunshine Game Streaming | Via ujust brew installer (removed from base) | Independent updates from Sunshine team |
"Our main focus is now on the Gamemode/Handheld/HTPC images of Bazzite which are undergoing major changes and improvements to bring them in sync with what Valve and others are shipping today."
— Kyle Gospo, Project Lead, Universal Blue / Bazzite
Technical Details
Bazzite OGC Kernel 6.19.10 and Mesa 26.0.4: Why These Numbers Actually Matter
The Kernel Branch used in this update is 6.19.10 OGC. OGC stands for the Open Gaming Collective branch, which are specific patches optimized for gaming workloads on Linux that address issues such as Scheduler Tuning, Input Latency, and Handheld Hardware Quirks that Mainline Kernel has not yet incorporated. By using the OGC branch of the kernel, Bazzite users receive performance enhancements that are weeks or even months before they ship in Vanilla Fedora or Upstream Stable.
For users running Bazzite Fedora 44 update hardware and pushing performance headroom on portable systems with tight thermal limits, the use of the OGC branch will make a difference.
On the graphics side, Mesa 26.0.4 Bazzite Linux is currently the latest stable point release of the open-source GPU driver stack. For users running RDNA 2 and RDNA 3 hardware from AMD, which includes most modern handhelds including the Steam Deck OLED, Lenovo Legion GO 2, and ASUS ROG Ally X. Mesa 26.0.4 contains bug fixes and compatibility enhancements for Vulkan and RadeonSI that improve stability and frame pacing in games. When combined with the OGC kernel, the Graphics-to-Input Pipeline in Bazzite is now running on some of the most recent open-source components available in a stable Linux gaming distribution.
brh rebase testing in their terminal. Roll back at any time with brh rebase stable or brh rollback.Quality of Life
Bazzite Image Size Reduction 1GB: The Pipeline Gets Even Leaner Soon
While not as flashy, one of the significant but quiet changes to occur within this update is what was removed from the Base Image. QEMU (the Virtual Machine Toolkit) and ROCM (AMD's GPU Compute Stack for ML and Scientific Workloads) were moved to Bazzite-DX, which is the Developer-Focused Variant. While gaming users do not require either tool on their Primary Image by default. Removing these tools from their respective locations results in a reduction of around 1 GB from the Base Image Size, which is relevant if you are running Bazzite on a Steam Deck or Handheld with a smaller EMMC or SSD.
Additionally, Bazzite included a brand-new Rechunker Engine with this update. This new engine manages how Image Deltas are packaged and delivered during Updates. As previously mentioned, Bazzite ZSTD compression Red Hat Chunkah is planned to arrive shortly thereafter. ZSTD uses significantly improved compression ratios when compared to older methods of compression. Therefore, Future Over-The-Air Updates will be leaner in terms of Download Size and Data Written To Storage During an Update Cycle. For Handheld users utilizing Metered Connections or Monitoring Storage Wear, follow this development closely.
Security
Bazzite SBOM Build Attestation OpenSSF Signed ISO: Security Gets Serious
This version of Bazzite adds transparency to gaming Linux distributions regarding security. Bazzite is generating Software Bills of Material (SBOMs) for every build. These SBOMs will allow Bazzite to report all changes made to the build of the OS in detail through a changelog. Users no longer need to refer to generic "release" notes. For those concerned about supply chain risk, this provides a very welcome improvement.
Users may relate this model to the same models being created in Enterprise Linux through Red Hat's ecosystem.
Build Attestation allows a user to cryptographically verify that any given image was indeed generated by the Build System. Each build is scanned for known vulnerabilities prior to shipping. Furthermore, ISO files are now digitally signed so that when users download a fresh install, they can verify whether the file has been modified during transmission.
For users who wish to ensure their gaming operating system matches what the Universal Blue project issued, and nothing else, the combination of these features is highly desirable.
Hardware Support
Bazzite Elgato 4K Capture Card Support, Steering Wheels, and ASUS ROG Patches Round Out the Hardware Wins
Gamers who use content creation platforms like OBS Studio, Streamlabs OBS etc. and run Bazzite as their primary desktop platform have had a nice gain — the Elgato 4K Capture Card now has native support in Bazzite. There is no need to add an additional driver or load kernel modules to make it function. The Elgato 4K cards typically required additional configuration on Linux.
The sim-racing community gains from the expanded Bazzite steering wheel driver support as well, which supports more wheels and pedals than ever before (which generally needed manual configuration). The Bazzite ASUS Linux ASUSCtl patches also give the ROG handheld community the best ASUS Linux patches and ASUSCtl updates to provide better control over fan curves, keyboard backlight control and hardware monitoring on ROG Ally and Ally-X devices. For gamers who follow hardware-support development of Linux in comparison to Windows for gaming hardware, these developments show that the ecosystem is rapidly narrowing the gaps. For anyone tracking the broader Linux kernel hardware support trajectory, these additions reflect how quickly the ecosystem is closing gaps versus Windows for gaming peripherals.
Timeline
How Bazzite Got Here: A Quick Look Back
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1Late 2023Bazzite emerges from Universal Blue as an immutable, Fedora-based gaming distro purpose-built for Steam Deck and Linux handhelds, gaining fast traction in r/linux_gaming and the broader gaming community.
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2April 2024Bazzite Buzz issue #14 marks a milestone update cycle, introducing early gamemode and handheld image improvements that started separating Bazzite from generic gaming Linux distros.
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3April 2025Bazzite 2.0 launches with major architectural improvements, OCI image delivery, and first-class support for the ASUS ROG Ally family and Legion GO, cementing its status as the go-to SteamOS alternative.
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4January 2026The OGC (Open Gaming Collective) kernel branch partnership is announced, bringing gaming-specific scheduler and input latency patches to Bazzite ahead of mainline kernel inclusion.
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5April 10, 2026The Bazzite update April 2026 drops kernel 6.19.10 OGC, Mesa 26.0.4, 1GB image reduction, signed ISOs, SBOM-powered changelogs, Elgato 4K support, and a six-point SteamOS alignment roadmap for handheld game mode.
What's Next
Bazzite SteamOS Alignment 2026: Six Things Coming to Handheld and Game Mode
While today's news covers many exciting pieces of functionality that were released by the Bazzite team, there are several more items that are being developed for inclusion in future versions. In addition, the Bazzite team outlined six additional items to improve -deck images and gameplay modes to further align with Valve's development of the overall Linux gaming stack, directly responding to what Valve has been building in the broader Linux gaming stack:
1. Bazzite OpenGamepadUI overlay Steam UI. A controller-based option to access options that are currently not accessible within the Steam UI, based off of OpenGamepadUI. This fills a large hole between what Steam exposes, and what actual hardware can do.
2. Steam Update UI Changelogs. Accurate, easy-to-read changelogs exposed in the Steam Update UI, eliminating the need to hunt down forum posts in order to figure out what really changed in the last update.
3. Improved Game Mode Update Experience. The update process for handhelds will receive a full overhaul to eliminate any issues experienced when updating handhelds.
4. Bazzite gamescope Nvidia streaming fix. The most recent gamescope build includes OGC branch fixes, along with working game streaming on Nvidia systems. This is a major issue for users of Bazzite that utilize Nvidia systems and would like to play games remotely on another device.
5. Bazzite TDP control SteamOS-Manager PowerStation. Bazzite is integrating Thermal Design Power management directly into the Steam UI via SteamOS-Manager and PowerStation. This allows users of handhelds to manage both performance and battery life from within game mode without having to leave said mode.
6. Bazzite Legion GO 2 bug fixes Input Plumber. The Lenovo Legion GO 2 has had several hardware-specific input quirks that have been causing headaches for users. This update includes targeted fixes via Input Plumber to address gyroscope mapping, controller mapping and other issues that have plagued newer handhelds in the Input Plumber Ecosystem.
-deck images will receive all of the above plus the Fedora 44 base slightly later than desktop builds. The team is giving themselves runway to test across their large handheld device ecosystem before a broader stable release. No ETA has been given beyond "when Fedora 44 launches, assuming no major regressions."
Comparison
Bazzite vs SteamOS Comparison 2026: Where Does Each Stand?
| Feature Area | Bazzite (April 2026) | SteamOS 3.x | Edge |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kernel Branch | 6.19.10 OGC (gaming-tuned) | Valve-patched 6.x stable | Bazzite |
| Desktop Mode | Full KDE / GNOME (Fedora 44 base) | KDE Plasma only, limited apps | Bazzite |
| Hardware Support | ROG Ally, Legion GO 2, Elgato, steering wheels | Steam Deck optimized, limited 3rd-party | Bazzite |
| Update Model | Immutable OCI, atomic updates, rollback | Immutable, atomic, rollback | Tie |
| Image Size | ~1GB lighter after April 2026 update | Fixed Valve-managed size | Bazzite |
| Security Transparency | SBOMs, attestation, OpenSSF, signed ISOs | Signed images, limited SBOM visibility | Bazzite |
| Game Streaming (Sunshine) | Via ujust brew install (not pre-bundled) | No native Sunshine support | Bazzite (with setup) |
| Non-Steam Device Support | Broad (any x86-64 PC, handheld, HTPC) | Steam Deck only officially | Bazzite |
LinuxTeck Take
Bazzite Linux New Features 2026 and Why the Timing Is Right
Bazzite continues to develop new features in 2026 at a rate far greater than most distribution teams. As of 2025 Linux gaming reached 5% market share on Steam and has maintained a solid foothold going into 2026. Bazzite has played a huge role in the increase of that number. Bazzite was able to deliver fast iterations in public while developing a community where bug reporting replaces angry rants on Reddit. The Bazzite update in April 2026 is proof that momentum has not decreased.
It was good strategy by Bazzite to position itself as a Bazzite Linux gaming handheld 2026 option through its SteamOS alignment efforts. Valve can take their time, but Bazzite will continue to move at a faster rate. In addition to matching SteamOS levels of compatibility and feature availability, Bazzite went even farther with regards to supporting hardware, providing more secure environments, and offering greater flexibility on the desktop side. This allowed Bazzite to create a space that doesn't rely on being able to beat Valve, but instead allows Bazzite to run parallel with Valve. For customers looking for something beyond the locked down Deck image, Bazzite offers that. As noted above, the Bazzite Universal Blue gaming Linux ecosystem around Bazzite is currently among the most active open-source gaming projects available anywhere. If you are tracking Fedora's downstream ecosystem or watching the broader Linux system layer evolve, and this latest development simply proves that point.
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