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Latest Comments by Phlebiac
Google announces another three games confirmed for Stadia
29 Sep 2020 at 6:01 am UTC

Quoting: Liam Daweid software don't support Linux, never have. You must be confusing them with something else. They previously released some unsupported binaries for old titles many years ago, plus some open source engines but they've never supported Linux proper.
True enough... I've got a Quake3 metal box around here somewhere, but that wasn't from iD, it was from Loki.

Microsoft Edge comes to Linux in October as a preview
23 Sep 2020 at 6:54 am UTC

Quoting: AwesamLinuxI can see the value for Microsoft to have their own browser even on Linux. Whenever there is a problem, they can just refer to trying their browser and verify if things work there.

I have used Google Apps much more than Office 365, and have encountered lots of minor issues using any browsers other than Chrome. Including Chromium based ones, so even though everyone should be following established web standards the reality appears to be different :grin:. In a perfect world though everything should work just fine in any browser :dizzy:
The problem is that Google intentionally hinders other browsers; for example, YouTube is using deprecated HTML which other browsers don't support, just to make the experience there slightly worse on browsers other than Chrome. I wouldn't trust Microsoft not to start doing the same for Edge.

Stadia pushing more indie games with Stadia Makers, PUBG dropping keyboard and mouse queue
23 Sep 2020 at 6:16 am UTC

Is there (temporary?) exclusivity for the Stadia Makers program? I see at least two games in that list that are followups to existing games (Figment and Darkside Detective).

Fantasy grand strategy city-builder Songs of Syx is out in Early Access
22 Sep 2020 at 1:36 am UTC

Quoting: Ehviswhy is there a crash option in the settings? Which actually crashes when you click it.
Truth in advertising!

Valve rolls out News Channels onto Steam to follow your favourite curators - like us!
22 Sep 2020 at 1:33 am UTC Likes: 1

Quoting: EhvisThe only thing I've found mildly useful has been curators about special features.
Agreed; some I've found useful: "Proton Compatible", "Broken Linux Promises", "Powered by DOSBox", "Powered by ScummVM", and "icculus.org".

Faraway: Director's Cut getting a launch delay to be 'bigger and better'
19 Sep 2020 at 5:46 am UTC

"alluring 3D world"? Those are some rather flat looking polygons.

Comedy point and click adventure Plot of the Druid to get a demo in October
19 Sep 2020 at 5:38 am UTC Likes: 1

A remaster of the old Indy games would be awesome! I guess Lucas is more protective of that (and Star Wars!) than they are of Day of the Tentacle; I enjoyed this one:
https://catmic.itch.io/return-of-the-tentacle [External Link]

Blasphemous confirmed to release for Linux on September 21
18 Sep 2020 at 5:26 am UTC

Quoting: kuhpunktWas even part of the Humble Monthly a while ago
Oh, that must be why I already have it!

Valve developer shows off Gamescope for Linux at XDC 2020
18 Sep 2020 at 5:23 am UTC Likes: 1

Quoting: Thetargos[Some times I see Wayland catching up to the X features
I think most of the "catching up" the last couple years has just been about improving XWayland, i.e. backwards compatibility. It seems Wayland already has features that X11 never will. But since I'm playing games on Nvidia drivers, I'm still running X11! Eventually, enough games will be using SDL2 and thus run on Wayland natively, and XWayland support for Nvidia drivers will have improved enough.

GNOME 3.38 'Orbis' is out now to showcase a modern Linux desktop
18 Sep 2020 at 5:15 am UTC Likes: 2

Quoting: LinasTo find stuff on the desktop you have to literally move whatever you are doing out of the way
It seems a lot of people like running everything with their windows maximized; I know GNOME3 was trying to encourage that at one point. Personally, I can't stand that.

Quoting: Purple Library GuyBut certainly for what I use most, I like to put a launcher on a toolbar. The toolbar is normally visible, and I launch with a single click, which is faster than any of the more newfangled search-oriented schemes. I don't know what things are like now, but early Gnome 3 was very much against the idea of letting you have a toolbar or put a launcher on it... I understand that nowadays if you install the right extensions you can frustrate the design ambitions of the Gnome people sufficiently to do many useful things, probably including that.
I like this one (there was another before that, but it stopped being maintained):
https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/1160/dash-to-panel/ [External Link]

I understand it was largely based off of this:
https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/307/dash-to-dock/ [External Link]

Which really is mostly taking GNOME's built-in "dash" and making it always visible.

Quoting: Purple Library GuyI have a lot of games (though not by some people's standards), and I don't always decide which one in advance. So it's kind of good to have a few of the games I'm currently interested in as desktop icons; I close up or minimize other software, have a look at what I might want to play, and pick one. Desktop icons can also be nice for that file I need to do something with in the next couple of days--put it in the desktop and resize it big so it'll be there staring at me as a reminder.
I very much can relate to these points.