Latest Comments by Purple Library Guy
Fallout 3 removes Games for Windows Live, works well on Linux with Proton
14 Oct 2021 at 9:38 pm UTC Likes: 1
Two things seem to follow:
1. If the game refuses to work offline because of other DRM, that's not actually Steam causing the problem.
2. If Valve goes under and there is no Steam, Steam would have no new patches for the game, so . . . no problem.
14 Oct 2021 at 9:38 pm UTC Likes: 1
Quoting: ArehandoroAccording to that thread, if a game doesn't have separate non-Steam DRM such as Denuvo, offline mode works indefinitely as long as Steam has no new patches for the game (if you're offline, how does it tell?).Quoting: Purple Library GuyIt doesn't last indefinitely for all the games: https://steamcommunity.com/discussions/forum/0/1744483505475893224/ [External Link]Quoting: ArehandoroTo play Steam games offline, even if we were to have ALL games on our HDDs, we would need Goldberg Emulator, which to me is nothing more than another crack to bypass the online features of Steam.Maybe I have all the wrong Steam games? Every time I've tried to play a Steam game when I didn't have internet access, it popped up a thing bitching about not being able to contact Steam and asked me if I wanted to play in offline mode; I said yes and played the game. I didn't need a crack or an emulator or whatever. So as far as I can tell, what you're saying just isn't the case.
Therefore, saving the difference in features, and not counting all the things Valve have done for the gaming community, etc, requiring Steam to play a game is not different as requiring GfWL.
Two things seem to follow:
1. If the game refuses to work offline because of other DRM, that's not actually Steam causing the problem.
2. If Valve goes under and there is no Steam, Steam would have no new patches for the game, so . . . no problem.
NVIDIA Beta 495.29.05 rolls out with GBM for expanded Wayland support
14 Oct 2021 at 6:29 pm UTC Likes: 1
14 Oct 2021 at 6:29 pm UTC Likes: 1
Interesting that they finally caved on GBM. I wonder why, and why now?
KDE celebrates 25 years with a big new Plasma desktop release
14 Oct 2021 at 6:19 pm UTC Likes: 2
14 Oct 2021 at 6:19 pm UTC Likes: 2
Quoting: LoftyI just want animated/interactive desktops on Gnome/KDE. Like Wallpaper-engine ( https://store.steampowered.com/app/431960/Wallpaper_Engine/ [External Link] ) but native to Linux rather than having to run steam in the background and with extra features like night/day transitions (other than the simple one currently offered which isnt really a transition, but more of a wallpaper switch).I don't actually want any of this stuff for my own personal desktop, but I agree it would be cool if we had it.
Sure there are goofy workarounds or scripts but to actually have a WPE like application that is integrated better into the DE & even interactive (like a built in conky) would be nice, with a Variety like app indicator to quickly access settings, change or pause etc.
It's weird that this doesn't commonly exist on Linux given that Linux distros have forever been all about creating that custom aesthetic. From 3D cube desktops, to firework cursors and wobbly things. Weirdly Windows itself now seems to feature more of the kind of theming/animation elements id expect out of the box on most distros that seems to be missing (excluding the likes of Deepin and other customized community KDE distros)
Proton Experimental fixes up Satisfactory networking making it easier to join others
14 Oct 2021 at 6:16 pm UTC Likes: 3
14 Oct 2021 at 6:16 pm UTC Likes: 3
Well. I'm glad this game's networking is now Satisfactory.
Fallout 3 removes Games for Windows Live, works well on Linux with Proton
14 Oct 2021 at 6:08 pm UTC Likes: 2
14 Oct 2021 at 6:08 pm UTC Likes: 2
Quoting: ArehandoroTo play Steam games offline, even if we were to have ALL games on our HDDs, we would need Goldberg Emulator, which to me is nothing more than another crack to bypass the online features of Steam.Maybe I have all the wrong Steam games? Every time I've tried to play a Steam game when I didn't have internet access, it popped up a thing bitching about not being able to contact Steam and asked me if I wanted to play in offline mode; I said yes and played the game. I didn't need a crack or an emulator or whatever. So as far as I can tell, what you're saying just isn't the case.
Therefore, saving the difference in features, and not counting all the things Valve have done for the gaming community, etc, requiring Steam to play a game is not different as requiring GfWL.
A look at the top 100 Steam games and how many will work on Linux and the Steam Deck
13 Oct 2021 at 10:44 pm UTC
13 Oct 2021 at 10:44 pm UTC
Quoting: KohlyKohlYou asserting that doesn't make it so. Is there some argument you're not making because you think it's self-evident? 'Cause, my previous post explains why I don't think it's self-evident.Quoting: CFWhitmanYour argument was that Valve wanted SteamOS VIA Linux to succeed. By allowing Windows to be installed on Steam Deck, it negates that argument as SteamOS 3.0 will also be on Windows.Quoting: KohlyKohlThe mere fact that one is even allowed to install Windows on the Steam Deck negates this argument.How so? Do you know what "negates this argument" means? It implies a significant logical flaw that makes the argument invalid. Even if what I said turns out not to be the case, it would not be logically flawed; it would merely be incorrect.
Quoting: KohlyKohlI hope most people keep Linux on the Steam Deck. However, I've known enough Windows gamer's over the years to know that many of them will be more than willing to install Windows on the Steam Deck even if it is something they normally wouldn't do.We'll see I suppose. I don't see a high percentage of people moving it to Windows unless Valve "drops the ball" somehow. The most likely way I could see would be if this is too soon for the whole Proton/Steam OS approach to be truly ready (or, conceivably, that the Proton/Steam OS approach could never be ready enough).
By allowing other ecosystem, such as different manufacturers or different operating systems, it shows that they are fine with whatever happens. They only care about Steam succeeding and they are hoping that Steam Deck furthers that goal.
A look at the top 100 Steam games and how many will work on Linux and the Steam Deck
13 Oct 2021 at 7:36 pm UTC Likes: 1
The question is, can Valve get more sales to people who wouldn't buy if the safety, ahem, valve of Windows as an option weren't there, than the number of people who end up actually exercising that option? If they can get the SteamOS Steam Deck and Proton working smooth enough, arguably few people will feel the need to go to the trouble of installing for themselves a not-actively-supported OS on the device.
So like, say they sell three million units to people who would buy the thing no matter what OS was running or available on it. That by itself would be three million Linux installs they would get with a locked down machine.
And say they sell another one million to people who are skeptical of SteamOS/Linux but figure if it's a problem they can always load Windows on it. But only 200,000 of those actually do so. Then they have 3.8 million Linux installs instead of 3 million--a net gain. Even if a couple hundred thousand of the original three million end up ripping out Linux, they're still ahead on the open platform vs the closed.
And they'll probably get some sales, though not in huge numbers, to people who have no intention of putting Windows on it but are interested in the idea of having a Switch-like thing that isn't crippleware, that they can tinker with in different ways. Those people are also often influencers, so they could boost broader sales by talking the thing up. So leaving it open has that benefit.
It's still a gamble. If SteamOS and Proton don't deliver and users get frustrated, and so lots of people who started out platform agnostic end up ripping SteamOS out and putting on Windows, they could end up with less net Linux installs than if they'd sold a locked down device. But if it's that bad it'll be a failure anyway so whether it's locked down becomes kind of moot.
13 Oct 2021 at 7:36 pm UTC Likes: 1
Quoting: KohlyKohlThe mere fact that one is even allowed to install Windows on the Steam Deck negates this argument.I don't think it does. Aside from it being fundamentally hard to claim you're advocating for open systems while peddling a closed machine, there's a gamble there.
The question is, can Valve get more sales to people who wouldn't buy if the safety, ahem, valve of Windows as an option weren't there, than the number of people who end up actually exercising that option? If they can get the SteamOS Steam Deck and Proton working smooth enough, arguably few people will feel the need to go to the trouble of installing for themselves a not-actively-supported OS on the device.
So like, say they sell three million units to people who would buy the thing no matter what OS was running or available on it. That by itself would be three million Linux installs they would get with a locked down machine.
And say they sell another one million to people who are skeptical of SteamOS/Linux but figure if it's a problem they can always load Windows on it. But only 200,000 of those actually do so. Then they have 3.8 million Linux installs instead of 3 million--a net gain. Even if a couple hundred thousand of the original three million end up ripping out Linux, they're still ahead on the open platform vs the closed.
And they'll probably get some sales, though not in huge numbers, to people who have no intention of putting Windows on it but are interested in the idea of having a Switch-like thing that isn't crippleware, that they can tinker with in different ways. Those people are also often influencers, so they could boost broader sales by talking the thing up. So leaving it open has that benefit.
It's still a gamble. If SteamOS and Proton don't deliver and users get frustrated, and so lots of people who started out platform agnostic end up ripping SteamOS out and putting on Windows, they could end up with less net Linux installs than if they'd sold a locked down device. But if it's that bad it'll be a failure anyway so whether it's locked down becomes kind of moot.
Twitch has suffered a huge leak of source code with a possible Steam competitor (updated)
13 Oct 2021 at 7:18 pm UTC Likes: 3
13 Oct 2021 at 7:18 pm UTC Likes: 3
Quoting: EhvisAh, but I bet the telltale signs have already started to manifest. Thinning hair, more trouble maintaining muscle tone, skin deteriorating . . . the list of symptoms are nearly endless. That bread and water will get you in the end!Quoting: crt0megaMe! I have eaten bread. I even drank water! And see, I didn't die later!Quoting: EikeHeard bad things about this. Everybody who ingested it died sooner or later...!Have you ever heard of anyone who ate bread and did not die later? Me neither! It's a huge conspiracy, bro! :dizzy:
Post-apocalyptic 4x strategy game Punk Wars releases November 11
13 Oct 2021 at 4:30 pm UTC
13 Oct 2021 at 4:30 pm UTC
This sounds quite cool and fun, but I have to say that somehow "Unite humanity and lead it to the new era of peace and prosperity!" doesn't really seem like a Punk thing to me.
AMD Radeon RX 6600 launches today aimed at high-refresh rates and 1080p
13 Oct 2021 at 4:28 pm UTC Likes: 4
13 Oct 2021 at 4:28 pm UTC Likes: 4
Quoting: scaineMan. I've been getting happier and happier that I bought a new PC including new AMD graphics card of some sort, not very long before all this nonsense started. Hopefully by the time I'm looking to upgrade again, it will all be long over.Quoting: StenPettHopefully, this will be a GPU people can actually buy.I just checked scan.co.uk and they're taking pre-orders at just under £530 for the 6600XT card. Which is pretty insane considering I bought my (slightly more powerful) 5700XT in February 2020 for less than that. Considering how close the 6600XT is to the 5700XT, I wonder why they're pitching it as a 1080p card, when I think the 5700XT was pitched as a 4K card two years ago. And it does do well at 4K in a lot of games, but needs FSR (or equivalent) upscaling for the big, modern 3D games, such as Cyberpunk or Horizon Zero Dawn.
But it honestly feels almost irresponsible to launch a new card in these circumstances. All it feels like is splitting an already tiny stock of silicon between an ever larger range of cards you're only to sell to scalpers. I know I'm being extremely cynical, but the last two years have been an absolute car crash for GPUs. I can't see how this is at all healthy for the PC gaming market. Looks like 4K gaming now demands at least a grand of spend on the GPU alone.
- Valve wins legal battle against patent troll Rothschild and associated companies
- Game manager Lutris v0.5.20 released with Proton upgrades, store updates and much more
- Rocket League is adding Easy Anti-Cheat, Psyonix say Linux will still be supported with Proton
- Unity CEO says an upcoming Beta will allow people to "prompt full casual games into existence"
- Godot Engine suffering from lots of "AI slop" code submissions
- > See more over 30 days here
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