Here Is Valve's Source Engine Left 4 Dead 2 On Linux

Posted by Michael Larabel on August 09, 2012

Valve's SIGGRAPH 2012 presentation last night -- about the Source Engine on Linux and their experiences with maximizing the OpenGL performance of their game engine on Linux -- was a success.

More details about the presentation will be available in the coming days, including the slides. However, for those overly-excited, here's a few photos from the Valve Linux presentation in Los Angeles. There's also a photo of Left 4 Dead 2 on Linux, although it's not too clear and doesn't show (Ubuntu) Linux in the background with my photos from April when at Valve HQ being much more clear.

Left 4 Dead 2 on the Source Engine running natively under Linux with OpenGL is faster than on Windows when both the Direct3D and OpenGL renderers are tested there.

With the performance now being maxed out and the Linux graphics driver support moving along, I would expect to see the Left 4 Dead 2 Linux beta to surface in the very near future. The support is now in rather good standing for some sort of beta (though how open it will be remains to be seen) and originally the target that was estimated back in April when I was at Valve HQ was that they might be able to ship something around July. With Valve time factored in, we should see something soon -- also leading to my previous comments months ago about safely seeing something before my "annual pilgrimage", which most faithful Phoronix readers know what that means (hint: think dirndls, bretzn and bier!). Valve has already publicly stated that L4D2 will be delivered this year.

Thanks go out to Jeroen Baert, the Phoronix reader that sent in these SIGGRAPH photos. The slide deck for the presentation should be published soon.

Discuss this article in our forums, IRC channel, or email the author. You can also follow our content via RSS and on social networks like Facebook, Identi.ca, and Twitter (@Phoronix and @MichaelLarabel). Subscribe to Phoronix Premium to view our content without advertisements, view entire articles on a single page, and experience other benefits.
Latest Hardware Reviews
  1. Gallium3D Continues Improving OpenGL For Older Radeon GPUs
  2. 15-Way Open vs. Closed Source NVIDIA/AMD Linux GPU Comparison
  3. Nouveau vs. NVIDIA Linux Comparison Shows Shortcomings
  4. AMD Radeon Gallium3D More Competitive With Catalyst On Linux
Latest Software Articles
  1. Btrfs vs. EXT4 vs. XFS vs. F2FS On Linux 3.10
  2. AMD Radeon R600 GPU LLVM 3.3 Back-End Testing
  3. F2FS File-System Shows Regressions On Linux 3.10
  4. Previewing The Radeon Gallium3D Shader Optimizations
Latest Linux News
  1. DNF Still Advancing As Experimental Yum For Fedora
  2. Logitech Begins Supporting Linux Users
  3. Modern Intel Gallium3D Driver Still Being Toyed With
  4. Linux 3.10 Kernel Benchmarks On A Core i7 Laptop
  5. GCC 4.8.1 Compiler Due To Be Out Next Week
  6. Linux 3.10 Kernel Benchmarks For Intel Ivy Bridge
  7. Linux's "Ondemand" Governor Is No Longer Fit
  8. Firefox 22 Beta Enables WebRTC Support
  9. OpenSUSE 13.1 Milestone 1 Released
  10. DRM Graphics Driver Comes For Dove/Cubox
  11. JADE: An LLVM-Based Video Decoder For MPEG RVC
Latest Forum Talk
  1. Modern Intel Gallium3D Driver Still Being Toyed...
  2. DNF Still Advancing As Experimental Yum For Fedora
  3. Btrfs vs. EXT4 vs. XFS vs. F2FS On Linux 3.10
  4. DRM Moves Ahead With HTML5 Specification
  5. Linux's "Ondemand" Governor Is No...
  6. New Linux Kernel Vulnerability Exploited
  1. Computers
  2. Display Drivers
  3. Graphics Cards
  4. Motherboards
  5. Peripherals
  6. Processors
  7. Software
  8. Operating Systems
  9. All Articles
  1. Linux Benchmarking
  2. OpenBenchmarking.org
  3. Phoronix Test Suite