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Latest Forum Posts
But the platforms that sell:
Steam (has most of them)
GOG (has a bunch of retro games that you don't find anywhere else)
itch.io (has some mostly smaller games that you may not find in other places)
Humblebundle (has a few stray linux builds of games that haven't been added to other stores. Like Torchlight)
Other than that, there are a few games that are sold on the dev websites only. Obviously there are key stores, but since those don't actually deliver the games, they don't really count. Especially since those do not actually register the platform of purchase and therefore don't advertise that Linux is actually used as a gaming platform.
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i guess that covers 90%+
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Last edited by on_en_a_gros on 24 May 2020 at 1:03 pm UTC
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OTOH this list got to be overloaded with forgettable indie Unity titles.
Thanks. How do you know they are all native? Is there a way to tell?
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All the games should have a native Linux build wathever it's advertised or not, like some beta build. I think that the only way to be sure that all are available on Linux is to manually check.
I just realized that the open source game engine like openmw or open Ra, which are technically native games, are not listed.
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Support comes and goes, especially for proprietary titles, so I don't expect you will find any list that will have all (as of today) available games.
ok cool. if I manually check what should i be looking for? in the requirements section if it says nothing extra then that means it's native?