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User Submitted Editorial: Current Linux gaming situation

By Wojtek88 - | Views: 20,458
Note: This is all the personal thoughts from the user who wrote it. A lot of it is taken from our own Release Calendar which may be missing games, please consider submitting games that are missing.

Every year, when we're near the end, we start to create some summaries.
I've just decided to do small summary of what happened for me (a Linux gamer) this year. I am going to focus on AAA titles (and those that are close to being AAA), so if you're interested in Indie games, it's possible that this article is not for you.

First of all it was a great year. The number of Linux titles that we received is good, but shouldn't it be better? Personally I think it should. And I hope it still can be.

I've just decided to go through the great release calendar, that TheBoss did for us and to list the titles that I see there. And to give you some thoughts.

Anyway, let's do a quick trip through all the months of this year, and take a brief look on AAA titles.

January:
- Dying Light. Well received game created by the Polish studio Techland. Many people on this site played it a lot, some of you said it was great, some had huge performance issues. And what's worst - while there were huge teams working on PS4 and XBox One versions (> 100 people), Linux version was created by... 2 students. I really appreciate their work, but that's still not kind of port quality that I look for.

February:
- Apotheon? Oddworld: New 'n' Tasty? These titles, for me, are not big enough.

March:
- Torchlight 2 - good RPG with good (but not great) performance of the port, with minor issues. However, it's important to note that this game is 3 years old.

- Cities: Skylines - great Sim City alternative, one of the best games released for Linux in general, but not without performance issues.

- BioShock Infinite - The port of the game was done by Virtual Programming. This brings another good game to our beloved platform, but like always it caused a small "native vs wrapped game" shitstorm.

- Pillars of Eternity - well received RPG, with an old fashioned approach to the genre.

- Shadow Warrior - FPS for all the fans of swords and weird creatures. Not really my type of game, but definitely something that makes Linux world better.

April:
- Nothing I would be interested in.

May:
- Spec Ops: The Line - I may sound little bit weird - but this is the best surprise game that I played this year. Of course, you can play it once and you will never go back to it, but for 3.99 Euros I bought a game that I have never heard of, and had a really great time while playing it. Of course, it's wrapped (VP port), it has its issues, but I recommend it.

June:
- Nothing I would be interested in.

July:
- Star Wars: KOTOR 2 - this is the most sad moment of the year. I was terrified that a 10-year-old game would be the type of game that we are going to be happy for. Of course it is still good game, but it shouldn't be one of the best games in our libraries. It just should be there, as one of many games.

- Middle-Earth: Shadow of Mordor - The first AAA game on our platform this year. My hardware did not manage to even run it... But that's my problem. Most of you were able to enjoy the title, I watched 13 fps result in benchmark. But definitely the type of games that we are looking for.

August:
- DIRT Showdown - First good racing game on our platform. Ported by VP, so it's another wrapped title. I have nothing against wrapped titles, as long as they bring good titles to our platform. Let me start with the sentence - I have finished this game and maxed-out the score on all the races. So the game was better then I assumed. But I had multiple issues with this one that I cannot forget - I had invisible tyres on almost each car I was steering and on multiple cars that were next to my car. This just cannot happen for people who are not interested in Linux success like we are, but just want to play some games.

- Company of Heroes 2 - Feral Interactive's port of the well-received RTS game. Also my hardware didn't manage to run it. Still a title that I am happy that is in my library and waits for better times.

September:
- Nothing I would be interested in.

October:
- Alien: Isolation - Yet another port from Feral Interactive. Never played it, but many of you were happy with it. And you had some spare pants, I haven't had any of them :).

November:
- Magicka 2 - Nice RPG game, really good that it is on our platform!

December (so far):
- Nothing I would be interested in.

I've listed 13 games. That's not a result that would impress me. What's more, most of the games are not new and shiny. All the games that I've listed (except Cities: Skylines and Pillars of Eternity, which are not really AAA games) were ported after some time of release date. But even the two newest games - Shadow of Mordor and Alien: Isolation - were already one year old when they were ported.

Let's see what seems likely to happen before Christmas. In the last few days there were activities in these titles:
- GRID Autosport
- Saints Row series games (which ones is uncertain)
- Divinity: Original Sin
- Total War: ATTILA
- Rocket League

I guess most of us don't believe in a Divinity: Original Sin port, because of what Larian Studios did to us. I'm not waiting for that title, but that's just my attitude, I hope it will be a great port and all the sins will be forgiven.

Anyway those titles look really promising. If they get released, I guess most of us will have at least one game to play over Christmas.

To sum up. Was it an exciting year? Hmmm... maybe. But still, without more AAA titles, Linux gaming won't make steps forward. Why did I even write this down? Because I remember what was promised. Do you? I know you all do! Let's refresh our memories (I refer to this article):

- Shadow of Mordor (checked)
- Payday 2
- Batman: Arkham Knight
- Saints Row IV
- Company of Heroes 2 (checked)
- Magicka 2 (checked)
- Total War: Rome II
- The Witcher III
- GRID Autosport
- Total War: Attila
- Evolve

It looks like a few games may come at the end of the year (GRID Autosport, Saints Row IV, Total War: Attila, maybe Total War: Rome II), 2 are officially delayed (Payday 2 and Batman: Arkham Knight), but 2 games are in a really weird situation.

While Evolve was announced in a weird way (it was not listed in a banner, but it was included in one description of the games that are coming). The situation with The Witcher 3 is just as weird, because CD Project Red has never officially confirmed the game (I don't consider emails to random users as an official statement).

I really hope The Witcher 3 will be ported, as well as other confirmed titles and tons of other, not even planned yet games.

As Christmas time is coming, I wish you all great ports in the near future, and then a few months later, tons of great games based on Vulkan API that natively run on Linux. If you have any remarks or comments, just write it under the article, I would love to share my findings with you. Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
Tags: Editorial
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43 comments
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wojtek88 Dec 9, 2015
Quoting: Crazy PenguinI don't care about this so called "AAA" games, as they are mostly overpriced cr-AAA-p. Indies and smaller developer studios making way better games. They don't annoy me with bullshit DRM or stupid Pre-Order stuff. No Day-1-Contentpatches for which I have to download several GBs before I can play. No AlwaysOn sh**, and so on. Sorry, but I still don't see the point of cr-AAA-p games.
I respect your attitude. But none of us wants pathetic way of product delivery on Linux. We just want good products. Sorry for repeating Witcher 3 multiple times, but this game was delivered in very reasonable way. Product, that was maintained after release, received 16 free dlc (even if none of them were valuable) that had no impact on standard version and one DLC with new campaign. From my point of view that is fair. But I agree, there were issues like download patch that is > 8 GB big, but on PS4 you can do it seamless, during the game (If you don't need to play multiplayer).

Quoting: Crazy PenguinCompanies like EA, Ubisoft & Activision will not support Linux in the near future. They have their own stores, which are in competition to Valve.
We all understand this situation, and it's healthy. While I know EA (Origin) and Ubisoft (UPlay) platforms I'm not aware what Activision offers. But anyway take a look, that nobody listed titles like FIFA (EA), Far Cry (Ubisoft) or Battlefield (Activision). We just discuss products of companies that can cooperate with Valve. But of course, it is just something that we want.

Quoting: Crazy PenguinAnd for the wanted racing game. Here is another one.
https://www.gamingonlinux.com/articles/grid-autosport-releasing-for-steamos-linux-on-december-10th.6315
Yep, I've listed this game in the article. And I am really happy that it seems that Codemasters is on the board. Hope other titles of this manufacturer will be ported as well.
RTheren Dec 9, 2015
Personally, I agree with you.

I really, really would like to see PayDay 2 and Saints Row series before christmas to download them ASAP ;)
Arehandoro Dec 9, 2015
To be honest I'd be more interested in seeing my complete current list of Steam games ported to Linux than new-ish AAA games being ported. I "miss" my Windows partition due to this*, not for The Witcher 3 or Fallout 4.

Also, lately most of the new games I buy are via kickstarter and normally don't add a pledge unless they have a linux version.

Don't get me wrong though, at some point I will want to play The Witcher 3 or Fallout 4 too but they're just not my preference right now.

* I now I can play some games through a Steam Wine installation but not all of them work and it's just not ideal.
aL Dec 9, 2015
dont panic just yet. This is going to be a long race... expect otherwise and you are going to be burn too soon
tmtvl Dec 9, 2015
Thing is, what makes Linux perfect for stuff that's actually important (servers,embedded,...) also makes it a pain for desktop gaming: modularity.

I don't mind though, I love tinkering and the games I like are all old hat anyway.
Purple Library Guy Dec 9, 2015
I think what makes this article easy to misunderstand is that on one hand, the author says at first that this is not just a list of the AAA games, but a personal list; in comments he reinforces that, saying that he only listed the games he was interested in. But late in the article he draws conclusions more generally about the state of SteamOS gaming from the shortness of the list. For the rest of us, though, it's pretty damned hard to compare the author's personal list with the broader state of gaming. We don't know how much came through that he just wasn't interested in, we don't know how much was released not on SteamOS that he was interested in. That makes the article inconsistent; basically a personal list can't really support a general conclusion, especially if we don't have access to the inside of the person's skull.

When was Civilization: Beyond Earth released? I'd pretty surely rate that AAA.
oldrocker99 Dec 9, 2015
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I dunno, I'm pretty damned happy with Steam, and the performance I get from the games I own; I'm not a framerate chaser, as long as the game is playable (I'm looking at you, Shadow of Mordor) at a decent rate.

I do like TBS over most action games, I'll admit, and my favorite games this year have been Torchlight II (notwithstanding), Pillars of Eternity, Age of Wonders 3, Pandora:First Contact, and Empire:Total War. I know they all weren't released this year.
Shmerl Dec 10, 2015
What do you call an AAA title? Big budget or publisher funded game? Using this term always makes things confusing.
Shmerl Dec 10, 2015
QuoteStar Wars: KOTOR 2 - this is the most sad moment of the year. I was terrified that a 10-year-old game would be the type of game that we are going to be happy for. Of course it is still good game, but it shouldn't be one of the best games in our libraries.

What does that suppose to mean? One of the best games in my library are old games. Why would you be terrified about such thing? Good games are art, and masterpieces remain masterpieces.


Last edited by Shmerl on 10 December 2015 at 5:28 am UTC
Shmerl Dec 10, 2015
Quoting: cheerockieUnfortunately but is very probable, that Witcher 3 will not be released on Linux in native.
I know it from a reliable source...
But is very possible for "wrapper" port (with some CD Projekt RED support) in 2016.

What source is that?
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