I bought the âremasteredâ versions of Grim Fandango and Forsaken on GOG, because theyâre super cheap at the moment. Both have native Linux versions.
And both these Linux version crap their pants. đ«€ The bundled SDL2 of Forsaken says it âcanât find a matching GLX visualâ and I couldnât figure out how to fix that. I didnât spend a lot of time on Grim Fandango.
Both work great in Wine. đ€Š
(I do have the original version of Grim Fandango from the 1990ies, but that one does not work so well in Wine. I figured, if itâs so cheap, why not. And I now get to play the english version. đ The german dub is pretty damn good, actually, but I always prefer the original these days.)
#7upqiiq
(#7upqiiq) In all fairness, GOG says that Forsaken is only supported on Ubuntu 16.04 â not current Arch Linux. If you ask me, this just goes to show that Linux is not a good platform for proprietary binary software.
Is it free software, do you have the source code? Then youâre good to go, things can be patched/updated (that can still be a lot of work). But proprietary binary blobs? Very bad idea.
#3w5osiq
(#7upqiiq) @eldersnake@we.loveprivacy.club This wasnât always the case, though. Quake3, Quake4, Unreal Tournament 99 and 2004 are examples of games that used to run very well as native Linux games. But that was 20+ years ago âŠ
#flkdo5q