About a year ago, I bought the game On the Rain-Slick Precipice of Darkness since it looked fun and there was a Linux version released simultaneously with the Mac and Windows versions. I enjoyed the first episode so much that I immediately bought the second episode as soon as it came out. Unfortunately for me, however, in the time between episode 1 and 2, I had upgraded my PC and had switched from a 6600 GT running the closed Nvidia drivers to a G43 chipset running the open Intel drivers. Since the games require S3 texture compression, which the Nvidia drivers support but the Intel drivers do not (due to patent restrictions), the game would no longer run.
After a bit of searching on the Internet, I found out that S3TC support could be obtained by compiling a library for it, but it's no longer maintained and doesn't seem to work. After compiling and installing it, the driver reports supporting GL_EXT_texture_compression_s3tc, allowing the game to run, but every 3D scene inside the game is completely black, which seems to me like the textures aren't actually being decompressed.
What I'd like to know is if this behavior is limited to Intel hardware (I had heard ATi and Nvidia have it built into the hardware, avoiding any licensing issues, but Intel implemented it software to cut costs), or does it affect everything using an OSS driver? Will the external library be maintained again in the future? (there's a gallium-s3tc branch, apparently). I've tried searching online for discussions about this, but the only ones I've found are from 2003 or earlier, and a lot has changed since then.
I had planned to upgrade to an ATi card in the future to support their open-source efforts, but if I have to run the binary driver just to play my games, I might as well just go back to Nvidia, since their binary driver is more stable and supports Wine. :/
After a bit of searching on the Internet, I found out that S3TC support could be obtained by compiling a library for it, but it's no longer maintained and doesn't seem to work. After compiling and installing it, the driver reports supporting GL_EXT_texture_compression_s3tc, allowing the game to run, but every 3D scene inside the game is completely black, which seems to me like the textures aren't actually being decompressed.
What I'd like to know is if this behavior is limited to Intel hardware (I had heard ATi and Nvidia have it built into the hardware, avoiding any licensing issues, but Intel implemented it software to cut costs), or does it affect everything using an OSS driver? Will the external library be maintained again in the future? (there's a gallium-s3tc branch, apparently). I've tried searching online for discussions about this, but the only ones I've found are from 2003 or earlier, and a lot has changed since then.
I had planned to upgrade to an ATi card in the future to support their open-source efforts, but if I have to run the binary driver just to play my games, I might as well just go back to Nvidia, since their binary driver is more stable and supports Wine. :/
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