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Serious Sam: Siberian Mayhem is out now as a partnership between Timelock Studio and Croteam. It can run rather well on Linux, although you do need a quick adjustment for Steam Play Proton.

This is a much shorter and simpler game than previous entries, as it's a sort-of standalone expansion that sits together with Serious Sam 4. Although, going in cold is not a big deal, since it's mostly the usual mindless fast-paced shooting you would expect from a Serious Sam game. The game actually started off life from a modding team, who under guidance from Croteam, turned it into an official game in the series.

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Out of the box, it does work on Linux with Proton and so it will on the Steam Deck too. However, there's no sound. A quick fix is available though! All you need to do is go into the sound settings and select OpenAL as the output instead of the default XAudio. After that, it all works as you would expect.

Performance is a bit shaky though, which is true on Windows as well. Since it's using Croteam's game engine, you can swap Direct3D 11 for Vulkan in the Graphics options to get native Vulkan on Linux (instead of it going through DXVK). In my own testing (at least on NVIDIA), you're definitely going to want to hit the switch to Vulkan too, as it gave a boost of ~20FPS in most cases and was less stuttery too.

It clearly needs some more optimization as a whole though, as other players have also noticed the low GPU usage and micro-stuttering that's completely random even with nothing happening. Most of the time it's okay and good enough to run and gun your way through it.

You don't get much breathing space, your heart will be furiously pumping and your fingers may begin to ache as it's so fast. Perhaps a little too fast at times, everything feels like someone set a knocked a magical speed dial up. Honestly, it's like you're on roller skates but that is true of most Serious Sam games.

It does the job quite nicely of making you feel like the ultimate bad-ass with no filler — it's all action. Unless you count a few optional side-missions, which are still full of completely insane action. A few dumb one-liners too because what's a hero without that? If that's what you're after, it's thoroughly entertaining.

Available to buy on Humble Store and Steam.

Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
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Purple Library Guy Feb 1, 2022
Hmmm . . . I can see Liam's point here, but I also have a bit of trouble with aspects of it. So, first, I want to draw a distinction between being interested in something and being in favour of it. If, as a wild for instance totally not provoked by a recent movie, there was a huge asteroid soon going to strike the earth, I'd be interested, to say the least. I'd want to know. I might have comments on the subject. I would not be pro-asteroid. I would feel it unreasonable if a moderator told me that if I didn't have anything good to say about the asteroid, I should stay away from news about it because I was clearly not interested.

A second distinction I'd like to point out is the distinction between people saying the site should not cover news about games that only run in Proton, and people saying they would prefer that those games ran natively. I certainly agree that Liam can cover whatever he wants. Further, it's clear that games running on Proton do allow you to game on Linux, and from a strategic point of view Proton is clearly important, for better, worse or both, to gaming on Linux. So, news about Proton, and games that run on it, is clearly news about Gaming on Linux, and I think it's absolutely reasonable for Liam to shut people up who want to tell him not to cover such.

But that is not the same as saying "I wish this game also ran natively" or "I think Proton is in the end going to prove a net negative to gaming on Linux". I don't think those are actually unreasonable things to say, and I think you can be interested in Proton and Proton coverage and still want to say them. To be clear, I don't say them because I think the first one is too obvious to bother saying, and the second I think is probably not the case, but there's nothing wrong with saying them.
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