It's amazing how this thread can survive since 2012.
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:
It is a testament to how much people want to play this game on linux. Or how bored they are... I'm a mix of both.It's amazing how this thread can survive since 2012.
It's amazing how this thread can survive since 2012.
Cool that you got CRC at least. Wine under Fedora doesn't allow me to install .NET. Can't seem to enable Proton too, but I will play around.
If it this easy to get dlls on Proton prefix - good news, from setup stand point.
It is a testament to how much people want to play this game on linux. Or how bored they are... I'm a mix of both.
I reboot to Windows just for ED and music production. I find it infuriating have to use subjectively inferior OS just to load game I love. For example, I do web coding, I want to take pause, I am playing TF2 because I can't play ED.
Thankfully Windows 7 is still usable and Microsoft can't remotely disable it actually working on my computer. But at some point I will have to say goodbye to Windows completely.
Linux is a stable and powerful system.
But its number of users compared to Windows, is its main problem
You need to install it via winetricks with an older version of wine as 3.16 fails the dotnet40 install. Also one good thing at least here is the launcher under proton doesn't have none of the glitches in it like running it under stock wine:
I understand that company like FD wouldn't be very interested into doing Linux port unless Valve vouches for SteamOS port, but other than that....it would make completely sense money wise.
Not really convinced ...
Maybe if there are 3-4 million of "potential" players, but all do not like the same style of game.
How much love the games of the space ?
Over 2.5 million actual people bought Elite: Dangerous.Not really convinced ...
Maybe if there are 3-4 million of "potential" players, but all do not like the same style of game.
How much love the games of the space ?
It's not about which platform has got more players, but the potential to rival other platforms (and I'm not talking about PC here). If Valve gets proton right and manage to whitelist a substantial game library then they've solved one of the few main reasons why Steam boxes were a flop, think a 4k 60fps capable console platform with a larger number of great titles would be a nice alternative to a PS4 or Xbox.
As for PC gamers the dodgyness of Microsoft not only with it's data collection practices, but the fact they seem to be gearing up to a UWP only environment where there's a chance that future iterations of Windows will require developers to submit their games to the store or be left behind. If that ever occurs you'd be very thankful someone like Valve developed a way to easily crossover as Linux very well could be the last bastion of independent game studios.
Considering Linux gamers are mostly geek types, they *love* space games. They love sim games.
Over 2.5 million actual people bought Elite: Dangerous.
Gamers don't care what OS things run on. They want performance, ease of use and stability. If Linux can provide those things, players will flock to that platform. Steam on Linux bridges that divide. It is currently lacking "killer apps" because it's a classic chicken / egg problem. 'There's no gamers on Linux, because there's no games. There's no games on Linux, because there's no gamers.' A game producer advocating spending millions to port a game to Linux, to quote Yes Minister is a 'courageous decision' in that environment
The Windows OS is simple (relatively) and safe. Anyone with half a brain can use it (and do), but it is today essentially spyware designed to grab your personal info and is loaded with gigabits of unnecessary (and mandatory) crapware. That will only increase over time, because they are a corporation and there's money to be made. Linux demands more brain power from a user as it has a sharp learning curve and you need to know how to both run and maintain it. It is also a leaner OS and with the right skill set you can ultimately decide what goes into it. The majority of people don't want to think about their PC, they just want it to work. They willingly sacrifice control for convenience. Linux users prefer things the other way around.
Of the two OS's, Linux currently beats Windows in the performance and stability categories. When ease of use on Linux improves, then the numbers will swell. The Vulkan API is slowly making inroads. Steam on Linux is nudging that along. Game publishers would love to decouple their games from Microsoft's closed garden, but they want to sell product at minimal expense, so they tend to stick with Windows. Linux is also being shot in the foot because of the vast numbers of distros out there. Game companies can't ensure compatibility across all of them.
The Orbis OS on PS4 is a variant of FreeBSD. Elite: Dangerous runs on that just fine, which underscores my point.
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Gamers don't care what OS things run on. They want performance, ease of use and stability. If Linux can provide those things, players will flock to that platform. Steam on Linux bridges that divide. It is currently lacking "killer apps" because it's a classic chicken / egg problem. 'There's no gamers on Linux, because there's no games. There's no games on Linux, because there's no gamers.' A game producer advocating spending millions to port a game to Linux, to quote Yes Minister is a 'courageous decision' in that environment
The Windows OS is simple (relatively) and safe. Anyone with half a brain can use it (and do), but it is today essentially spyware designed to grab your personal info and is loaded with gigabits of unnecessary (and mandatory) crapware. That will only increase over time, because they are a corporation and there's money to be made. Linux demands more brain power from a user as it has a sharp learning curve and you need to know how to both run and maintain it. It is also a leaner OS and with the right skill set you can ultimately decide what goes into it. The majority of people don't want to think about their PC, they just want it to work. They willingly sacrifice control for convenience. Linux users prefer things the other way around.
Of the two OS's, Linux currently beats Windows in the performance and stability categories. When ease of use on Linux improves, then the numbers will swell. The Vulkan API is slowly making inroads. Steam on Linux is nudging that along. Game publishers would love to decouple their games from Microsoft's closed garden, but they want to sell product at minimal expense, so they tend to stick with Windows. Linux is also being shot in the foot because of the vast numbers of distros out there. Game companies can't ensure compatibility across all of them.
The Orbis OS on PS4 is a variant of FreeBSD. Elite: Dangerous runs on that just fine, which underscores my point.
Not exactly true. I use linux at work, both servers and workstations, but at home i still have windows. And there are 2 reasons for this:
1. While there is a lot of different software for linux it lacks some tools i am used to having. From hardware monitoring/fan speed control to decent audio player. There are a lot of half-finished-half abandoned things that are "nearly good" but nowhere near stable or convenient.
2. All the no spyware/not bloated thing is a lie. Those distributions where steam and most games are supposed to run (ubuntu and derivatives) have even more crapware in stock installation than windows. From search indexing (yeah, i do not need it on gaming pc) to social media apps to dreaded autoupdate and pulseaudio... and most of those are even harder to disable than they are in windows, because authors for some reason put decent amount of work making sure they are "impossible" to disable on purpose. Stability is not great either. Most desktop-related stuff starting with all desktop environments available is by far less stable than modern windows, and so are most of utilities like graphical text editor or file manager.
One interesting thing is - game support is not on of the issues. 99% of games i play run on linux either natively or through wine (the only exception here is actually ED). It is something one may call "general desktop experience" that is holding me back on windows.
I hope all this changes some day, i regularly try to "finally find everything i need to switch to linux completely" and have a dedicated pc just for that, but as it is now i still use windows 7....
I absolutely do not dispute your words which are right.
But Linux is way too far from the reality of the market and the standard user