Support us on Patreon to keep GamingOnLinux alive. This ensures all of our main content remains free for everyone. Just good, fresh content! Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal. You can also buy games using our partner links for GOG and Humble Store.
We use affiliate links to earn us some pennies. Learn more.

I wouldn't call Frostpunk a tycoon game but I'm not going to turn my nose up at a good deal. The Tycoon Titans Humble Bundle has some fun hits in it to grab.

Here's all that's included along with their compatibility rating for Steam Deck / Linux with ProtonDB ratings included too. Each is also a Steam link if you need more info first.

steam deck verified Steam Deck Verified

PlateUp!

steam deck playable Steam Deck Playable

Frostpunk (ProtonDB Gold)

Mad Games Tycoon 2 (ProtonDB Platinum)

Espresso Tycoon (ProtonDB Gold)

Farm Manager 2021 + DLC (ProtonDB Platinum)

Transport Fever (ProtonDB Platinum)

RollerCoaster Tycoon 3 Complete Edition (ProtonDB Silver)

And coupons:

  • 35% off Frostpunk 2
  • 10% off Farm Manager World

Check it out on Humble Bundle.

Also don't miss out on the XCOM Complete Humble Bundle as it really is an awesome deal.

Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
2 Likes
About the author -
author picture
I am the owner of GamingOnLinux. After discovering Linux back in the days of Mandrake in 2003, I constantly checked 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. You can also follow my personal adventures on Bluesky.
See more from me
You can also find comments for this article on social media: Mastodon
All posts need to follow our rules. For users logged in: please hit the Report Flag icon on any post that breaks the rules or contains illegal / harmful content. Guest readers can email us for any issues.
1 comment Subscribe

Philadelphus 10 hours ago
PlateUp! is fantastic and I can't recommend it highly enough. In much the same way that FTL introduced roguelike mechanics to the "being a spaceship captain" genre, PlateUp! introduces them to the restaurant management genre. I got it a few months after it released in August 2022 and have over 150 hours in it so far. It runs flawlessly in Proton (I've often wished it got a native Linux version just so I could submit an article here about it), and it controls excellently on the Deck – I've spent probably dozens of hours playing it on mine (and on my desktop, it works equally well with mouse & keyboard and a controller in my opinion, due to its simple control scheme of movement + four buttons).

Basically, you have a little restaurant where customers come in and you have to take their orders and serve them. As days pass more customers arrive, and every third day you get a choice of two possible options to take which increase the difficulty in some way, though often with a slight customer reduction (one will be a new food dish to serve, the other is usually some sort of customer behavior or modifier). If a single customer's patience bar ever fully depletes your run is over and your restaurant gets shut down, with you goal to survive 15 days (which lets you set up a "franchise," choosing some of the options you took to do a New Game Plus run. You can keep going into Overtime after day 15, however, and I've personally made it to Overtime day 22 using the game's other main feature: automation.

With the money you earn each day, you can buy a variety of appliances which allow you to automate food production. It starts simple, like a mixer which can automatically chop ingredients or a portioner which automatically takes portions from larger dishes like soups, but eventually you're designing complex systems which can handle multiple ingredients, chopping and heating and combining them into a finished product, all borne along by conveyor belts (perhaps all the way out of the kitchen to waiting customers!). I'm not 100% sure if every dish in the game can be automated, but it wouldn't surprise me and an astonishing number of them can be. Designing a Factorio-like layout to optimize production efficiency and extend your route just one more day is its own flavor of addicting. (I find games like Factorio and Satisfactory fun, but they quickly become too complicated for my brain to handle once they extend beyond what I can see all at once. In PlateUp!, there's a pretty high level of complexity that can be attained, but it all always fits on one screen, which keeps it manageable.)

And while it can be played solo, it truly shines in multiplayer, where you get to find out how good you and friends are under pressure when there are three customers waiting impatiently outside in the snow, table 4 still hasn't had their onion soup served yet, and will someone please clean up the customer's mess on the floor because it's slowing everyone doing front-of-house down, and also I said they needed a medium steak on table 2, not a well-done…!
While you're here, please consider supporting GamingOnLinux on:

Reward Tiers: Patreon. Plain Donations: PayPal.

This ensures all of our main content remains totally free for everyone! Patreon supporters can also remove all adverts and sponsors! Supporting us helps bring good, fresh content. Without your continued support, we simply could not continue!

You can find even more ways to support us on this dedicated page any time. If you already are, thank you!
Login / Register



Buy Games
Buy games with our affiliate / partner links: