Mhmmm 2077
Member
We need to wait for official release of SteamOS, ideally released togetther with next Microsoft's fumble.
yeah, that would be nice... might have changed since I last checked, flatpacks or whatever are a relatively new thing, I suppose, and replace deb and rpm... but probably just another "standard" because Linux people love to fork everything instead of actually nailing the first thing ... but some apps just require /configure /make /make install, and won't uninstall clean or even at all when you click on uninstall or just want to upgrade to the current version some months later.
Uhm no, they won't. 0% chance. You know how little 3-4 million consoles is in this context?The Steam Deck has sold 3-4 million in 3 years. Eventually Valve may get numbers rivalling Playstation and Nintendo in their "consoles".
Arch Linux, Bazzite, CachyOS, and all of the other Linux distributions suffer because Linux isn't universal. Want to get an app? Time to figure out how exactly to do that because there are different apps and "app stores" for different versions of Linux.
No one is going to switch to Linux anytime soon. It's like 4% market share and trying to force developers to make games for an extremely niche OS is a really dumb idea.The Steam Deck has sold 3-4 million in 3 years. Valve may even be working on updating the Steam Box.
The next step for Valve is to pay AMD to make a custom SOC. Eventually Valve may get numbers rivalling Playstation and Nintendo in their "consoles". Many devs will start making native Linux versions of their games.
As Xbox exits hardware, Steam enters the space as an alternative. Eventually Linux will get the same native 3rd party support as Xbox. This will incentivize many PC users to go full Linux. Eventually Windows may become the less attractive choice and some devs will start skipping Windows entirely.
Ftfy as it is an option since 2023.Steam deck was one of the very few pc's that doesn't ship with windows as an option.
Don't the game engines need Linux compatibility also?
Are the popular ones (unity, unreal) available for Linux?
Both unity and unreal have native Linux support.
I wonder if that is actually possible since "Linux" is barely meaning something specific. Developers might decide one day that they support SteamOS and then need to have playtesting and customer support on exactly that but supporting Linux with all its hundreds (?) versions that may or may not be compatible would probably be a nightmare. In the end it might be SteamOS, original Arch and Debian, maybe Ubuntu, maybe Fedora and everything else is not officially supported, 5 is probably already too much.Even Easy Anti Cheat has a Linux version.
So it's just up to the game developer to have support for it.
I wonder if that is actually possible since "Linux" is barely meaning something specific. Developers might decide one day that they support SteamOS and then need to have playtesting and customer support on exactly that but supporting Linux with all its hundreds (?) versions that may or may not be compatible would probably be a nightmare. In the end it might be SteamOS, original Arch and Debian, maybe Ubuntu, maybe Fedora and everything else is not officially supported, 5 is probably already too much.
It just has to be something specific. However that is reached. Unlikely but otherwise some idiot might think his Server Edition Linux which just comes with Terminal might suddenly run games...I doubt devs would target a distro. Rather they would target a kernel, API and driver version.
Maybe someone that knows more about Linux can confirm this.
Not political if your anti-cheat is kernel level as Windows is a fixed closed kernel whilst Linux you can build your own.
that is the main issue.
Snap and FlatPack exist, but FlatPack versions of apps can have limitations that a dedicated distro binary doesn't have. now try explaining that to the average PC user, that the FlatPack version of the file-search browser they have in their preinstalled app store doesn't have access to the list of your default apps for certain file types, so you get constant pop-ups and the context menu can't list certain apps or app based context options...
so literally how you install an app can change the functionality of it... and installing it without just downloading the flatpack can mean also looking through a list of dependencies to make sure you're not missing something
Ftfy as it is an option since 2023.
Eventually Windows may become the less attractive choice and some devs will start skipping Windows entirely.
If you mean installed right from the source, no. You can install yourself.Whaa? No there's no windows steam deck! Right?
If you mean installed right from the source, no. You can install yourself.
Dreams are healthy for the brain. It's good to dream. Problems only arise when trying to turn unattainable dreams into reality.…and then you woke up![]()
This.Better to persuade than force.
That hippy OS runs 90% of the internet.this isn't communist china we don't force people to make games for hippy open-source OS
I doubt devs would target a distro. Rather they would target a kernel, API and driver version.
Maybe someone that knows more about Linux can confirm this.
Is this why the internet is so gayThat hippy OS runs 90% of the internet.
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Oh, I know. Which is why I said I'm waiting for that "Happy medium" between the Users and the Devs. I play the AAA shooters like Battlefield, Call of Casual, Apex, etc. And with GTA6 coming, I ain't got time for no bullshit. But once all the parties involved act right, I'll be on Linux immediately. I'm sick of Windows. Only reason I don't dual-boot is because I'm lazy. SighAnti-cheat isn't exactly a problem, it works on Linux. It's more of a political issue than a technical impossibility.
There's a website that lists which games work with anti-cheat:
Are We Anti-Cheat Yet?
areweanticheatyet.com
Doesn't matter what % Linux is used on the backend if all you get out of it is a measly 4% userbase. Noone is going to switch to Linux anytime soon and trying to force people to is a good way of alienating them from your platformThat hippy OS runs 90% of the internet.
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