Patreon Logo 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 Logo 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.

ScummVM is an excellent tool that preserves a lot of classic games with new game engines to run on modern platforms and a huge 2026.1.0 release is out now.

The developers of it said that it might be the "biggest release we have made so far in terms of the added features and engines". With this release 12 new game engines were added and thanks to just 2 of them there's around 194 new games supported.

Some of the highlights of games supported now includes:

  • Dark Seed
  • God of Thunder
  • The Adventures of Willy Beamish
  • Heart of China
  • Nancy Drew: Secret of the Scarlet Hand
  • Nancy Drew: Ghost Dogs of Moon Lake
  • Ripley's Believe It or Not!: The Riddle of Master Lu
  • Little Longnose
  • Pilot Brothers 3: Back Side of the Earth
  • Pilot Brothers 3D. The Case of Garden Pests
  • Pilot Brothers 3D-2. Kennel Club Secrets
  • Features of National Fishing
  • Mom Don't Worry
  • Dog-n-cat: In the Footsteps of Unprecedented Beasts
  • Dog-n-cat: Island of Dr Ratiarty
  • Out of this World (Another World)
  • SLUDGE-based games
  • Adibou 2: Nature & Sciences
  • WAGE-based games
  • Penumbra: Overture
  • Tex Murphy: Martian Memorandum
  • Mort&Phil: A Movie Adventure (Special Edition)
  • Trick or Treat
  • Hodj 'n' Podj
  • The Last Express And probably various other games…

Multiple game engines saw big upgrades with the release too.

This release also saw big improvements to their Keymapper and Text-to-Speech systems. On top of that ScummVM can now be built with SDL3, there's support for scaling shaders for 3D games and significant upgrades for the Android, iOS and Atari ports.

Source: ScummVM blog

Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
18 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.
See more from me
All posts need to follow our rules. Please hit the Report Flag icon on any post that breaks the rules or contains illegal / harmful content. Readers can also email us for any issues or concerns.
10 comments

hardpenguin a day ago
User Avatar
This project keeps on giving, I simply love it. Big thank you to all the contributors and maintainers.
pb a day ago
User Avatar
Heart of China... I have it on my must-play list since forever (ok, since 1991). Has the time finally come? It's on GOG, too.

Gigeresque Dark Seed is also something I've been meaning to play one day, but I don't see it on sale anywhere...
Arehandoro a day ago
User Avatar
When I moved to the UK I only had a tiny notebook with me, which I couldn't upgrade for some years, with Linux on it. Back then, there weren't many games on Linux, and much less that my laptop could run. ScummVM was my saviour, allowing me to play all the great LucasArts classics again. And for that, I'm super grateful.
CatKiller a day ago
User Avatar
Just a reminder that [Luxtorpeda](https://github.com/luxtorpeda-dev/luxtorpeda) makes it super straightforward to use ScummVM (and DOSBox, and various engine reimplementations) with Steam games.
whizse a day ago
User Avatar
Quoting: pbHeart of China... I have it on my must-play list since forever (ok, since 1991). Has the time finally come? It's on GOG, too.
I'm only familiar with a handful of the games on that list, kind of hard to separate wheat from the chaff, but thanks to your comment, and a quick skim on Wikipedia, Heart of China seems right up my alley. On the wheatlist wishlist it goes!
Linux_Rocks 23 hours ago
User Avatar
Scummy. (But in a good way. lol)
Shmerl 14 hours ago
Nice, waiting for Debian to rebase scummvm on SDL3.
Geamandura 10 hours ago
This was always an amazing project to provide a 2D adventure game engine, but I genuinely don't understand what are they doing now with including separate engines for running a 3D game Penumbra. At this point what stops them from e.g. including OpenMW, including the Heroes 2 and Heroes 3 open source engines, etc.? What is the purpose of this project morphing into a bundle of their initial vision engine plus more and more unrelated random shit?
Purple Library Guy 2 hours ago
Quoting: GeamanduraWhat is the purpose of this project morphing into a bundle of their initial vision engine plus more and more unrelated random shit?
Well, from a user's perspective, not having to keep track of ten thousand little projects is kind of valuable.
whizse 1 hour ago
User Avatar
Quoting: GeamanduraThis was always an amazing project to provide a 2D adventure game engine, but I genuinely don't understand what are they doing now with including separate engines for running a 3D game Penumbra. At this point what stops them from e.g. including OpenMW, including the Heroes 2 and Heroes 3 open source engines, etc.? What is the purpose of this project morphing into a bundle of their initial vision engine plus more and more unrelated random shit?
What I think happened is that the HPL1 engine was in pretty bad shape. Outdated third party dependencies, hard to compile on modern platforms etc. There doesn't seem to be much activity on the GitHub page for the initial source release, and no active forks I could find so clearly some heavy TLC needed.

Presumably ScummVM already have a lots of tools needed for any game, input/sound, handling savegames, built with portability in mind and so on, and with 3D support already there with the Residual merger I guess it was less work integrating it with ScummVM than doing a total rewrite?
While you're here, please consider supporting GamingOnLinux on:

Reward Tiers: Patreon Logo Patreon. Plain Donations: PayPal Logo 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