It's fantastic. Over the years I never had luck getting wine to work, so haven't tried for the past 5 years or so.Just seen the news about proton - steam's version of wine built into steam beta (at the moment).
Looks promising.
Well I'm confused now.
My library consisted of games that could run on linux, the windows ones didn't appear.
With steam beta, I enabled steam play, and my library automatically updated and added games that would work with steam play.
So for me, my games all (linux native, and steam play) run through the steam client.
Issue currently is that ED required native .NET dll via winetricks and it doesn't work due of some issues with authorization. If that thing will be figured out, we most likely be able to run ED under Proton/Wine at some capacity.
Hey,
I'd like to start YET ANOTHER thread asking.. Who here has already pledged for Elite: Dangerous, and would consider upping their pledge on the chances there'll be a Linux version? (I fall into this category.)
Who here would actually *considering* pleding if there was a chance of someday being a Linux version of Elite: Dangerous?
So far, That Other Space Sim(tm) (aka Star Citizen) has at least 20% of their communiting voting for a Linux version as their "stretch goal"
(http://www.robertsspaceindustries.com/poll-additional-stretch-goals/)
TL;DR? 20% want Linux, 8% Want a mac version.
I realize that Windows would be the lion's share of the sales of Frontierangerous, but I'd certainly say it'd be worth it to *consider* a Linux version at *some* point. That'd certainly be enough for me to increase my pledge.
If you look at the Humble Indie Bundle's sales numbers, you can see that the Linux gamer market is worth at LEAST as much as the Mac gamer market, if not more so.
(http://cheesetalks.twolofbees.com/humble/) -- humblebundle sales statistics by OS.
It's for certain Linux gamers would appreciate Elite: Dangerous more than Mac gamers would. Anyone gaming under Linux is most likely a giant science fiction fan to begin with, and would appreciate the deep technical nature of Eliteangerous.
Anyway, I didn't see a thread asking specifically about the odds. I thought I'd make one.
Linux isn't written by a company. If we, the players, don't ask about it, we'll never ever see it.
There's a Linux thread in every game forum these days, this isn't the only Linux thread on frontier.co.uk.
^_^
Cheers,
-m
I hope there's at least a bug report about this somewhere, like in a ticket with Valve or Proton or whomever would be responsible for installing native dll libraries. That (or a discussion like it) would be the one to track to know when (probably not if) that bit of itch gets scratched and makes its way into Proton proper and then E: D just magically works one day..
If it was anything like my experience with No Man's Sky so far, It'll be a day to watch for, that's for sure.
Misses point of thread, spreads verbal manure full of assumptions instead.Y'all have been at this forever.. OP is from 2012.
Can't fault you for your tenacity, only your choice in gaming OS's.
Linux is a great OS for routers, spam filters, mail servers, web servers, kiosks, and a base layer for Mac OS, like Windows use to do with DOS decades ago.
Linux is not good for gaming. It's just not. Sure, it's cheap or free in most cases. I just wouldn't waste my efforts trying to game on it. Spend the money, buy a Windows license, run a Windows VM and game like everyone else.
Elon Musk wants OG Elite on Teslas. Bunch of FD people noticed and chimed in on that thread. And Teslas run arm-linux on their touchscreens. It's a first step, isn't it?
https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1045004446076301312
That self-driving mode they have had better be better than our Docking Computer.
Follow news here https://bugs.winehq.org/show_bug.cgi?id=43464
If Elite Dangerous could come Linux it will be a good thing. Linux is going to be more and more popular for games.
I vote for Elite Dangerous on Linux !
People have been saying this for over a decade and Linux still has a very very small group of people that play games on Linux. It's just not user friendly enough for the average user to ever want to use Linux. So until there are millions of gamer's using Linux and wanting to play games on the OS its never going to happen... not enough money to invest development hours into.
User friendliness has gone up by leaps and bounds of late, and there are many distro's that work very well for the 'normal' users, add that steam play is developing its proton interface between windows games and linux, which basically is a fork of wine with improvements, with steam behind this, it is a significant threat to windows.
Today I've managed to get the launcher/combat demo working in steam with the latest Proton 3.7.7 beta (which required an older wine to install dotnet40 into Elite's pfx), still CRC on the main game though.
Also this is a run through of the demo from the other week, we should expect good performance if we can ever get it to work: