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.
Latest Comments by Lofty
LEGO The Lord of the Rings gets updated and it's now Steam Deck Verified
1 Sep 2025 at 2:54 pm UTC Likes: 2

i wonder if these older Lego games will receive the remaster treatment. Putting them on a newer engine will makes them last longer too.

Steam UK users will now need a credit card to access mature content due to the Online Safety Act
29 Aug 2025 at 8:19 pm UTC Likes: 3

Quoting: coryoon'Solved' feels like it needs very heavy quotation marks around it, but I digress. If the UK govt. really is going to stick with this, they need to actually roll out some kind of national ID system
Although widely used in various European countries, the UK has been historically icky about implementing national Identity card. Typically for civil liberties reasons.

a physical 'card' is becoming outmoded, & we could expect a mandatory proprietary Andriod / IOS Identification 'App' with all the associated tracking. Yes it will be easier to update your facial / bio metric identity using an app and also verify yourself in a variety of interesting and useful ways. there comes with it a list of potentially harmful possibilities of course.

Still, i expect were only a year or two away from this. Five at best.

Steam UK users will now need a credit card to access mature content due to the Online Safety Act
29 Aug 2025 at 6:58 pm UTC Likes: 8

So i have to wonder what kind of backend monitoring will eventually be in place for private chats now that is linked to your physical identity. Given the nature of who has forced these changes ? I can imagine a scenario where vast datasets are being swept through and personal profiles are being built on peoples current and previously stored history ? Although i expect this has been happening to console users for years. Probably Paranoid , but something feels different about all this stuff this time round :unsure:

can we go back to the early 2000's late 1990's please.

Steam UK users will now need a credit card to access mature content due to the Online Safety Act
29 Aug 2025 at 5:37 pm UTC Likes: 3

Quoting: Linux_RocksWhat happens when you've got poor credit and no active credit cards? Like if you lose a job due to no fault of your own, can't pay your bills anymore, and that tanks your credit?
Pull yourself up by your bootstraps !

/S

Avowed from Obsidian gets a release date, and pre-orders with earlier access if you pay £80
18 Nov 2024 at 4:48 pm UTC

Quoting: scaineI have several, otherwise very intelligent friends who paid the £25 for Space Marine 2 and claim to have no regrets
Define intelligence, because often this excludes common sense.

No leaving a Steam account in a will after you die according to Valve
28 May 2024 at 12:11 pm UTC Likes: 2

Quoting: Pyrateyes, digital is never going to be as good as physical, but with GoG I think we're almost there,
yes we just put our games on a USB thumbstick :grin:

Microsoft's new Recall AI will take screenshots of everything you do - freaky
23 May 2024 at 1:58 pm UTC Likes: 1

Quoting: LoudTechie
Quoting: Lofty
Quoting: Eike
Quoting: Lofty
I'm not even what you may call a "privacy nut".
Although this is a common turn of phrase. It's time we removed the association of conspiracy theorist with a human right to privacy.
I agree.

Quoting: LoftyIn the early day's people were far more trusting of technology and saw it as largely altruistic and a benefit to society (which with opensource it still can be) but invariably the usual shadowy forces do their thing and here we are.
[bolding by me]

... but this does sound... conspirational.
Maybe they aren't out in public stood on a box selling you data viewable on a large screen but im perfectly happy to identify groups tucked away in some monolithic corporate box connected to a vast data center sharing deeply personal information about you or your loved ones to the highest bidder as shadowy forces.

To me that is the usual shadowy forces. i couldn't think of a better phrase as my "tin foil" hat is blocking the connection to my neural-link Ai brain feed.

if you cant think of a better turn of phrase then let me know.
Shadowy implies lack of transparency, which has really improved over the years.
The term forces dehumanizes them.
The "shadowy forces" call themselves "data brokers".
I would call them "privacy salesmen/salespeople(reliant on who I'm talking to)".

That having said. I'm not opposed to the term "privacy nut".
I've no issue with being the crazy one and it does get the point across.
[quote=LoudTechie]
Quoting: Lofty
Quoting: Eike
Quoting: Lofty
I'm not even what you may call a "privacy nut".
Although this is a common turn of phrase. It's time we removed the association of conspiracy theorist with a human right to privacy.
I agree.

Quoting: LoftyIn the early day's people were far more trusting of technology and saw it as largely altruistic and a benefit to society (which with opensource it still can be) but invariably the usual shadowy forces do their thing and here we are.
[bolding by me]

... but this does sound... conspirational.
Maybe they aren't out in public stood on a box selling you data viewable on a large screen but im perfectly happy to identify groups tucked away in some monolithic corporate box connected to a vast data center sharing deeply personal information about you or your loved ones to the highest bidder as shadowy forces.

To me that is the usual shadowy forces. i couldn't think of a better phrase as my "tin foil" hat is blocking the connection to my neural-link Ai brain feed.

if you cant think of a better turn of phrase then let me know.
Shadowy implies lack of transparency, which has really improved over the years.
Has it ? I mean i know there are laws around data protection such as GDPR. At least from a European perspective i could mostly agree. But Microsoft is an American company.

The term forces dehumanizes them.
Forces implies a large gathering of people committed to the same objective. Are we 'dehumanizing' an invading army by calling them a 'force' ?

The "shadowy forces" call themselves "data brokers".
I would call them "privacy salesmen/salespeople(reliant on who I'm talking to)".
'privacy salesmen' should not even be a thing,i would call them immoral shysters. It should not be a job to sell people's private information without consent at the level proposed here.

That having said. I'm not opposed to the term "privacy nut".
I've no issue with being the crazy one and it does get the point across.
So long as it's not used to dehumanize people who care about privacy or minimize the risks involved, hushing people into silence.

Microsoft's new Recall AI will take screenshots of everything you do - freaky
23 May 2024 at 1:31 pm UTC Likes: 1

Quoting: Eike
Quoting: Lofty
I'm not even what you may call a "privacy nut".
Although this is a common turn of phrase. It's time we removed the association of conspiracy theorist with a human right to privacy.
I agree.

Quoting: LoftyIn the early day's people were far more trusting of technology and saw it as largely altruistic and a benefit to society (which with opensource it still can be) but invariably the usual shadowy forces do their thing and here we are.
[bolding by me]

... but this does sound... conspirational.
Maybe they aren't out in public stood on a box selling you data viewable on a large screen but im perfectly happy to identify groups tucked away in some monolithic corporate box connected to a vast data center sharing deeply personal information about you or your loved ones to the highest bidder as shadowy forces.

To me that is the usual shadowy forces. i couldn't think of a better phrase as my "tin foil" hat is blocking the connection to my neural-link Ai brain feed.

if you cant think of a better turn of phrase then let me know.

Microsoft's new Recall AI will take screenshots of everything you do - freaky
23 May 2024 at 1:14 pm UTC Likes: 9

I'm not even what you may call a "privacy nut".
Although this is a common turn of phrase. It's time we removed the association of conspiracy theorist with a human right to privacy. In the early day's people were far more trusting of technology and saw it as largely altruistic and a benefit to society (which with opensource it still can be) but invariably the usual shadowy forces do their thing and here we are.

i don't feel like im a 'nut' i.e nutter <=> mentally unstable for wanting some privacy on my digital devices.

Valve makes paid 'Advanced Access' a clear feature on Steam now
24 Apr 2024 at 1:54 pm UTC Likes: 1

Quoting: finaldest
Quoting: Lofty
Quoting: finaldestI am done with this crap.

I am fed up of this complete utter greed. First we lost physical releases along with publishers destroying games preservation. Now they want even more money by charging £100+ for a broken PC game and now I am required to give yet more money to play the game on release day (AKA On time)

I am done. After 20 years I am now going back to the high seas.
i mean, yes and no. You don't have to play these overpriced "AAA" garbage titles, with terrible pricing, optimization, forced agenda's, Scam DLC, Malware DRM. There are hundreds of smaller dev's who would want your support, and of course a long back catalogue of existing games that can be modded. Then there are Retro games of which are still highly enjoyable and again can be emulated to look great.

But i do agree with the sentiment that until people change their buying practices non of this is going to change. And that applies to everything not just video games.
I will continue to support indy devs but I am now done with AAA publisher that implements this.

I am very disappointed that valve implemented this feature.
I don't blame you and i agree. My point was also why even bother pirating it even if it's free ? your still giving a shitty group of people your time and energy.