can you point me to that information. I would like to graph it.
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The Status Of Unigine's Linux-Compatible Game
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Cutting edge linux gaming platform
Having first hand experience with most of the leading game engines. I can say that the graphics in unigine surpass all the other engines in features, realism, and performance. While the more advanced sandbox tools present in some of the more expensive engines have not yet been made for unigine, the rendering engine is very well documented with great tests and is the most solid I've seen to date. They are cutting edge already implementing directx 11 features, and still remain fully compatible and optimized for both opengl and directx 9.
I think unigine will bring a wealth of new games to the linux platform since it is cutting edge, affordable, and fully cross platform. It seems they are currently working on supporting both xbox 360 and ps3 consoles so in my mind they check all the boxes as the leading engine for game development in the future, which bodes well for linux gaming.
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Originally posted by deeceefar2 View PostHaving first hand experience with most of the leading game engines. I can say that the graphics in unigine surpass all the other engines in features, realism, and performance. While the more advanced sandbox tools present in some of the more expensive engines have not yet been made for unigine, the rendering engine is very well documented with great tests and is the most solid I've seen to date. They are cutting edge already implementing directx 11 features, and still remain fully compatible and optimized for both opengl and directx 9.
I think unigine will bring a wealth of new games to the linux platform since it is cutting edge, affordable, and fully cross platform. It seems they are currently working on supporting both xbox 360 and ps3 consoles so in my mind they check all the boxes as the leading engine for game development in the future, which bodes well for linux gaming.
oh lord, another industry pro with experience far surpassing my own.
What does this 1 do....
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Originally posted by mirza View PostActually, emerging cloud services for gaming (GaiKai, OnLive, both in Beta) might bring *lots* of great games to Linux as soon as next spring.
Putting aside the likelihood that some stupid copyright law will probably stop us from getting the same service as in the USA, I doubt I could afford the subscription fee. I would much rather buy the hardware, Windows (if needed) and the game. If a gamer is in the financial situation to be able to easily pay the monthly fee they would probably have the money to buy a computer capable of playing the games they want.
Our residential internet plans down here are always capped, I would imagine that streaming games over the net at a decent resolution would eat our monthly download limits in a week, taking this into account it seems that these services are extremely expensive.
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I wish..
Originally posted by deeceefar2 View PostI think unigine will bring a wealth of new games to the linux platform since it is cutting edge, affordable, and fully cross platform. It seems they are currently working on supporting both xbox 360 and ps3 consoles so in my mind they check all the boxes as the leading engine for game development in the future, which bodes well for linux gaming.
The pessimist side says it's all up the publishers of these potential games. Just look at idTech5's uncertain future on Linux for a recent example, where the engine is completely cross-platform, but now they're uncertain if "it's worth it".
Big publishers only think about big $$$ - so even if a game engine can be run on anything with a simple recompile, and there's possibly an extra 10,000 byers for this publishers game, it is still "not worth it".
As a comparison the Blender Foundation is running a pre-sale campaign for it's 3. open movie Durian. They are targeting a - for them - high goal of 2000 copies. At this time they have already sold for ~ ?44,000 and that's for an 8 month production involving several people.
In my world that amount of money would be a decent year salary, and even if a GE-programmer earn more it doesn't take a year to port a true cross-platform game to Linux!? I'm really tired of this politics BS and I'm glad that 2D Boy enjoys their extra sales of "World of Goo" on Linux (that goes to all indie devs releasing cross-platform games).
I would love to see Blizzard and Valve set an example for the Big Guys, with releasing native Linux binaries for their games
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Originally posted by numasan View PostAs a comparison the Blender Foundation is running a pre-sale campaign for it's 3. open movie Durian. They are targeting a - for them - high goal of 2000 copies. At this time they have already sold for ~ ?44,000 and that's for an 8 month production involving several people.
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Originally posted by numasan View PostNo, but I was trying to show the amount of copies sold, not which OS the buyers use. I really can't imagine less than 2000 people buying Rage to play on Linux. How many people does S2Games expect is Linux users?
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