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An Interview With A Linux Game Porter

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  • #11
    Originally posted by deanjo View Post
    TO is NOT the centre of the universe contrary to what TO natives wish to believe.
    Spoken like a jealous Chicago native

    Seriously, I noticed that L33F3R had "Toronto, Canada" in his profile, and suddenly a post started forming in my mind...
    Last edited by bridgman; 03 July 2009, 09:50 PM.
    Test signature

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    • #12
      Originally posted by bridgman View Post
      Spoken like a jealous Chicago native

      Seriously, I noticed that L33F3R had "Toronto, Canada" in his profile, and suddenly a post started forming in my mind...

      Here is a map to the breadbasket and centre of the universe for ya .

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      • #13
        people live in Saskatchewan?

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        • #14
          Originally posted by Yfrwlf View Post
          Great interview, thanks. ^^

          I was especially interested in how plausible it is to port certain games, as well as how easy the GNU/Linux OS makes porting games and creating games for it to begin with. It needs to be made as attractive to game development as possible, and for all software in general of course.
          I think you're reading more into my remarks than you probably ought to. It's actually quite easy in most respects. It's nothing like what most people presume- things like "oh it's based out of DirectX, it's going to be difficult to port"...which isn't something you can actually infer from what it was "based off of".

          The state of sound on Linux *sounds* pretty bad indeed. Teehee.
          Heh... You're reading my remarks wrong there. It's the middleware that's the problem, not sound support on Linux. There's no way I'm going to be able to cough up $5k to pay for the license when someone uses Miles on a game I'd like to port. FMOD's got similar gotchas and IrrKlang only provides binaries for x86 and no real source code access (so you can't make IrrKlang work on Pandora, Beagleboard, Android, PRE, or Maemo- all of which could be targets now.

          PulseAudio still has issues.
          No kidding.

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          • #15
            Originally posted by L33F3R View Post
            is that the best you could find? You just interviewed a dude with 2k+ posts on your own forums .
            Yes, you too can get an interview with only 2k+ posts in the forums!

            All joking aside, L33F3R, I've done quite a bit more than that for the Linux community as a whole- and plan on doing more over time. Part of which was alluded to in the earlier part of the interview. Moreover, I'm one of the people that helped bring 3D acceleration support to Linux and I'm part of that group of people that brought it to the Embedded space amongst my claims to fame.

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            • #16
              lol u have a hell of a resume no doubt.

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              • #17
                Originally posted by Svartalf View Post
                Heh... You're reading my remarks wrong there. It's the middleware that's the problem, not sound support on Linux. There's no way I'm going to be able to cough up $5k to pay for the license when someone uses Miles on a game I'd like to port. FMOD's got similar gotchas and IrrKlang only provides binaries for x86 and no real source code access (so you can't make IrrKlang work on Pandora, Beagleboard, Android, PRE, or Maemo- all of which could be targets now.
                Developers are using these middleware systems because they are apparently easier to program for. They wouldn't want to pay the license for them either for the original game's platform, but they are, so apparently there is some kind of appeal. This appeal should be implemented in free software as well to make Linux more attractive for them.

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                • #18
                  Originally posted by Yfrwlf View Post
                  Developers are using these middleware systems because they are apparently easier to program for. They wouldn't want to pay the license for them either for the original game's platform, but they are, so apparently there is some kind of appeal. This appeal should be implemented in free software as well to make Linux more attractive for them.
                  Coding for DirectSound is an evil mess. Same with DirectPlay.

                  Miles/FMOD/IrrKlang/etc. get rid of the complexity and allow you to transparently target other platforms. $5k is chump change when you consider the willingness of the MacOS community to buy MacOS titles or if you're talking Wii or PS3. You'll make that back over it all. Most indies pick FMOD or IrrKlang right at the moment because the API's really easy to pick up, has reasonably painless licensing (IrrKlang's a pay once sort of affair depending on what licensing set you choose- it's only real drawback is that they typically don't provide source for it to you, so you're stuck with what they provide. I'm targeting more than just X86 or the sound would have been IrrKlang on Caster.).

                  There's some FOSS solutions beginning to shape up to the same sort of thing and if needs be, I'll help make them happen. You're right on that score, we kind of need something more than what's out there.

                  But to characterize it as being "bad" is overstating the problem, really.

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                  • #19
                    What an interesting coincidence. There's a conversation about the same subjects (viability of direct3d to opengl porting, etc) over at one thread at the official Bohemia Interactive forums, (http://forums.bistudio.com/showthrea...t=73279&page=6), which incidentally, I helped revitalize thanks to me. Over there, with the aid of one of their moderators, I started an online petition targetted at getting the most signatures as possible from the ArmA playing communities across the globe asking for a linux port of the BiA games. The petition is right here:



                    if anyone is interested in seeing ArmA 1 and 2, and maybe OpFlaspoint 1 native clients.

                    But going back on topic, I think Svartalf and many others here like DragonLord would like to comment on the remarks being said on that thread, specially from members Hoak and miyalrdo.

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                    • #20
                      You know, something just occured to me.

                      Originally posted by Svartalf
                      Convincing people to stick with Linux when they make PC type gaming decisions.
                      Is this the reason why Carmack and developers are losing interest in native Linux clients? I remember that with Quake Wars, I waited until I had the client sitting in my home folder to buy the game, but other people just went ahead and bought the game and ran it under wine. Heck, some people will just run the game under wine regardless of a native client. Just looks at Steam and Valve... How many linux gamers are under the mercy of the developers?

                      Is it in our best interests to refrain from buying, or giving any attention, to games that offer no native linux client, and only consider games that do offer a native client?
                      I like to think of that a man with a PS3 won't go out and buy 360 games, or vice versa.

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