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Why We Shouldn't Accept Bad Linux Ports

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Note: This is a really old article, if you're here, I do suggest you read this article "Why The Porting Method Doesn't Matter For Linux Games".

Thanks to the recent fiasco of The Witcher 2 I wanted to write down some thoughts on why we shouldn't accept bad quality ports from developers.

Only in recent years have we had so many damned games in our Linux libraries that you now see comments from Linux gamers like "I've got too many games already!" which I imagine now sounds familiar to a lot of you. We have never before seen so much attention from developers thanks to Valve & Steam.

Also thanks to the push from developers we are seeing ports come along that are quite frankly lazy or just downright buggy to the point of being unplayable for a majority of people.

The problem is if we keep accepting ports at a sub-par quality then Linux will gain a reputation for having low quality games. Think about that big picture for a moment, seriously.

Imagine if you will that AAA developers started pushing out more games for Linux using technology like this "eON" that was used to port The Witcher 2. Let's say we have a lot of them and it suddenly looks like Linux has a lot of big-name games. You then have plenty of people trying out Linux, and seeing that their games run with terrible performance on the exact same hardware giving them the impression that Linux itself is bad for gaming. That's not good for anyone.

I've seen many people say "the toolkit used to port doesn't matter?". That in my eyes is a very naive statement to make. Of course it matters, it can mean the difference of light and day in the quality of a game on Linux. Which directly goes back to my point above about the perception of Linux gaming.
You can still say the toolkit doesn't matter and use whatever comparison/analogy you fancy, but if the toolkit is the root cause of the issue, like it will be 99% of the time when we are talking about computer software then yes, it does of course matter.

I've seen comments now from other major websites stating we should just accept them and be thankful we have them at all. That is an idiotic statement from people who don't look at the bigger picture.

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Think about the developers and publishers who will see it as acceptable to push terrible Linux ports out the door and call it a day with only profits in mind. The consumer perception of Linux gaming would worsen yet again with even more bad quality ports.

I am all for ports from developers, of course I am I run this site after-all. I as a customer however do not want to pay for games that would work on Windows, but run like a snail on Linux, why should I? Why should you?

Final added point: You should never attack a developer when they reach out to the community having issues, that's not acceptable. Feedback is fine, but name calling is childish and makes Linux again look bad. Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
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About the author -
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I am the owner of GamingOnLinux. After discovering Linux back in the days of Mandrake in 2003, I constantly came back to check on the progress of Linux until Ubuntu appeared on the scene and it helped me to really love it. You can reach me easily by emailing GamingOnLinux directly. Find me on Mastodon.
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86 comments
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Anonymous May 25, 2014
Quoting: liamdaweIf a company cannot act on feedback why the hell should anyone care about them?

lol

let's see.

one dev jumped right into the problems in matter of minutes just to be shredded by people for no reason since all accusations were more than probably over his pay grade or not in his power

not even 2 days pass and liam whines all over the net how no one cares. guess it would be time to have your regular reality checkup
scaine May 25, 2014
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Quoting: SamsaiWhy do I care about a thing that makes the game to now work properly? Because I own it and I expect a non-beta release to work. People have pointed out that eON is most likely the cause for these problems and that means that they need to improve eON to run this game better.

Well sure. But do you know it's eON? The only people that can tell us for definite is CDPR and then we're back to my argument. I don't care if it's eON. I'd just want them to fix it.

Liam, in his last answer, suggests that previous eON ports for Mac have been bad too. Again, that has a lot of supposition, but if even he's right what can you do about it?

Obviously you can stop ever buying games that have eON in them, but there's two problems with that attitude.

1. How do you know?
2. Some eON ports work fine, so you could be avoiding a perfectly good game.

So I'd rather focus on the game itself rather than banging on uselessly and ineffectually about a component that works well in other situations.
Liam Dawe May 25, 2014
@Mr Anonymous

Another person not looking at the whole picture, this isn't about just Witcher 2 it's just an example. I'm guessing you don't understand my point on this at all.

Like I stated before, the Mac ports using eON are also terrible and I've play-tested them myself. They received very little after-care from VP (makers of eON).

I don't need a reality check thanks I am perfectly fine.
scaine May 25, 2014
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Quoting: liamdaweThat is how I feel Scaine and it won't change, again it's my opinion and as an editor I will always state it and clearly mark it as an editorial when I do so.

That's a big problem. Having an opinion. Good. Stating opinion in editorial? Good.

Disregarding arguments that could change your opinion? Ignoring arguments completely? Having your mind so made up that "it won't change". Ever?

That's definitely not good.

Tim Minchin puts it really well : http://www.timminchin.com/2013/09/25/occasional-address/

QuoteA famous bon mot asserts that opinions are like arse-holes, in that everyone has one. There is great wisdom in this… but I would add that opinions differ significantly from arse-holes, in that yours should be constantly and thoroughly examined.
Anonymous May 25, 2014
Quoting: liamdawe@Mr Anonymous

Another person not looking at the whole picture, this isn't about just Witcher 2 it's just an example. I'm guessing you don't understand my point on this at all.

Like I stated before, the Mac ports using eON are also terrible and I've play-tested them myself. They received very little after-care from VP (makers of eON).

I don't need a reality check thanks I am perfectly fine.

that is my point exactly. it isn't just about witcher or about linux. you just wrote it 100% like this. and to make it more affirmative about direction one only needs to read your comments

you either suffer from same problem as me. non native english speaker from slavic country where usual direct translation to english always sounds harsh or you really should rethink your editorial if you didn't put too many personal emotions into it
Liam Dawe May 25, 2014
My opinion changes all the time, in this one instance I just do not agree with yours Scaine it's that simple and is not an attack on you at all. It's not an attack on anyone, it's just my opinion which I and you and everyone else is free to state.

If I was truly disregarding peoples comments and opinions I wouldn't reply with my own thoughts on it.

If they fix up eON to the point of The Witcher 2 running well for me and the vast amounts of other people that it runs so terribly for then my opinion on eON itself will probably quite rightfully change.
albatros May 25, 2014
I didn't saw it that way before reading your article. Great post !

I still think wine can be good for ports, but only when it works really well. Right now, I guess it should be almost never.
Liam Dawe May 25, 2014
Also if anyone wanted to write a counter-article to my own on why things like toolkits don't matter, why ports like this are okay yadada feel free.

Anyone can write an article to show on GOL.
Samsai May 25, 2014
Quoting: scaine
Quoting: SamsaiWhy do I care about a thing that makes the game to now work properly? Because I own it and I expect a non-beta release to work. People have pointed out that eON is most likely the cause for these problems and that means that they need to improve eON to run this game better.
Well sure. But do you know it's eON? The only people that can tell us for definite is CDPR and then we're back to my argument. I don't care if it's eON. I'd just want them to fix it.

Liam, in his last answer, suggests that previous eON ports for Mac have been bad too. Again, that has a lot of supposition, but if even he's right what can you do about it?

Obviously you can stop ever buying games that have eON in them, but there's two problems with that attitude.

1. How do you know?
2. Some eON ports work fine, so you could be avoiding a perfectly good game.

So I'd rather focus on the game itself rather than banging on uselessly and ineffectually about a component that works well in other situations.
I think the dev who went onto the Steam forum admitted that they had problems with Linux, which lead to decreased performance, so there have to be problems with their port. And because they didn't change the base game and just packaged it with eON, that leaves eON to blame for the performance.

Your second point is really off-topic, but now that you mentioned it, I have never heard of any eON games that worked perfectly. And I think you also said in an earlier message that you don't know other eON ports on Linux, so I doubt you know a single perfect eON port on Linux.
Xil May 25, 2014
but what is there to accept ?

wither 2 is an old game, the fans of this kind of game will have had it in their library ages ago because they played it under wine long ago. It now pops up in our library under Linux.

It's unrealistic to think that Project Red will spend money on a port of an old game that has been on so many sales that the chances of it bringing any return of the investment are slim. That does not mean that what they did was good but its understandable.

I do agree with you on bad ports but we should focus our anger on new games that try to get away with this, for wither 2 just load it up under wine and enjoy it big time :)
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