Originally posted by HoboJ
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Proof In Steam's Mac Client Of Linux Support
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Originally posted by BlueKoala View PostSteam client for serverside perhaps; For desktop games, I doubt Valve would be far behind on that. It would be really smart of them to target at least Android IMO.
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Would be certainly interesting to have got a Linux client. Best would be of course when you could buy a game once and run it on any plattform possible. I don't see the reason in buying specific binaries. Caster can be converted usually using the demo binaries too, but maybe that does not apply to all games. Buy once, play on the plattform you just use, thats the way to go.
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I imagine they have test builds run on linux to weed out extra bugs caused by nonportable code. It would help their xbox and ps3 efforts. I also think they must be thinking of kiosks in gaming shops running Linux and Steam for cheap in the future.
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Once a major distributor starts supporting linux I think they will discover lots of people who never buy any games starting to spend their money.
And steam would be ideal, almost as easy installing games via steam as we're used to via apt-get/yum.
I for one would buy more games. I hate dual-booting, so the effort of playing a game is not worth it. I'm typically a casual gamer ("lots" of kids, I don't have the time for extended periods of hard core gaming any more) and don't play games since I can't fire up a game for 30 minutes of entertainment (which usually stretches into the late hours of the night) without spending several minutes dualbooting. Which also means that It'l take time getting back into where I was before I started gaming as well. (Hibernate on linux, boot windows, play, play, shutdown windows, restore hibernated linux works fairly well)
I'm definitely going to buy much more games once (casual) games are more available! (And games like Dragon Age) Wine is great, as long as a game works "out-of-the-box". When "fiddling" is needed, I don't have the time.
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Don't get excited...
Might I remind everyone here, that as far as we know, UT3/Linux port was -ready-, but was never released due to some undisclosed (legal?) reason.
There's a ----long---- way between having a launcher script that may or may not support Linux to a full blown Linux version release.
For now, we're left with ID-software and LGP (which hopefully is "just" resting).
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Originally posted by gilboa View PostMight I remind everyone here, that as far as we know, UT3/Linux port was -ready-, but was never released due to some undisclosed (legal?) reason.
There's a ----long---- way between having a launcher script that may or may not support Linux to a full blown Linux version release.
For now, we're left with ID-software and LGP (which hopefully is "just" resting).
And don't forget wine/CrossOver which IMHO does a great job. The only problem is that there are som many titles wine/crossover does not work with.
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