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- Nexus Mods retire their in-development cross-platform app to focus back on Vortex
- Windows compatibility layer Wine 11 arrives bringing masses of improvements to Linux
- GOG plan to look a bit closer at Linux through 2026
- European Commission gathering feedback on the importance of open source
- Hytale has arrived in Early Access with Linux support
- > See more over 30 days here
- Away later this week...
- Liam Dawe - Venting about open source security.
- LoudTechie - Weekend Players' Club 2026-01-16
- Mustache Gamer - Welcome back to the GamingOnLinux Forum
- simplyseven - A New Game Screenshots Thread
- JohnLambrechts - See more posts
How to setup OpenMW for modern Morrowind on Linux / SteamOS and Steam Deck
How to install Hollow Knight: Silksong mods on Linux, SteamOS and Steam Deck
I mean they're perfectly free to use it I suppose (it's released under a derivative of the SIL licence as far as I recall, and I've seen it all over the place), but c'mon... that's just trolling us, surely? :><:
I wrote a post at the ubisoft forums detailing my experience but heard of no interest.
[Ubisoft forums](https://forums.ubi.com/showthread.php/2029708-Uplay-leaks-file-descriptors-under-wine)
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And, just to be clear, I was being a little tongue-in-cheek with my “trolling” accusation. But it did take me aback when I saw the font.
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As to the behind-the-scenes of those events, though -- *why*, according to the game, things happen the way they do -- oh boy... it's an off-the-wall historical conspiracy, based on a mixture of popular tropes such as 'hidden history'/Atlantis & secret societies & the human race as a genetic experiment by an ancient civilization, and so on.
The (mini) controversy with respect to Unity was that its portrayal of Robespierre & Co. (the 'Montagnard' faction of what remained of the original Jacobin party) was too unfair, and that this 'progressive' albeit bloody faction deserved better. At the time I played the game, I really didn't know any better; but then I decided to read up on the subject. One major study that I've read since then (Jonathan Israel's '[Revolutionary Ideas](https://press.princeton.edu/titles/10187.html)') dispelled all doubts in my mind as to whether the Montagnards were anything more than a group of proto-fascists that helped plunge the revolution into complete madness by 1794. Pretty much none of the progressive agendas of the revolution (including the abolition of slavery) were due to that faction; but they've received credit all the same.
I now wish that the game had applied its trademark 'Forrest Gumpification' to the landmark events of the revolution, to portray our here (the good guy Assassin) as the collaborator of the true progressives at every significant turn. In Assassin's Creed 3, the player character wins all the major battles of the American revolutionary war, pretty much single handedly -- it's borderline caricature-silly, but it fits with the silliness of the entire 'hidden history' angle of the series.
What's surprising is how much accuracy is left after all that rubbish. They really go out of their way to make it as “believeable” as possible.
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I was scratching my head for a while over a page fault during the spash screen, but it turns out (from reading the Lutris script) that it needs d3dcompiler_43. If, like me, you don't use Lutris, you can install it with Winetricks.
That got the game running, but I also ran into some freezing after a few minute's play, and I'm not sure whether that's because - for some reason - I still had DXVK 1.1 installed, or if it's something to do with the “dxgi.maxFrameLatency = 1” DXVK option, also from the Lutris script. Could be either; “crashes and GPU hangs” was one of the reasons given for withdrawing 1.1, but I've never had any problems before. Anyway, I changed them both (putting a dxvk.conf in the game directory for the latter), and it now runs absolutely beautifully.
When that happens, all I can do is just restart the game.