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Multiplayer Linux Games

gooshy1 writes "Ok it's getting near the end of the year and people are beginning to wind down for the holidays. What I want to know is are there any decent multiplayer games that an office of about 4-7 can play, preferably action. The machines that we use are not all that great, P4 1.7Ghz with 2 year old NVidia graphics cards, so Quake and the likes are out of the question. A favorite is BZFlag due to its playability and nice tunable graphics. All thoughts welcome, and Merry Chistmas/Happy Holidays :-)"

16 of 654 comments (clear)

  1. Not too good? by MrRage · · Score: 5, Informative

    I've played Quake 3 on and AMD Duron 800 MHz and it works fine. Some of the newer games though...eh wouldn't work to well.

  2. Needs WINE, but its dirt cheap by mattgreen · · Score: 5, Informative

    Starsiege: Tribes.

    It is old, came out around 1998 or so. Single best multiplayer game. Infinite skill ceiling, fast gameplay, dirt cheap, and runs well on anything. I still play it regularly. (can you tell?)

  3. Enemy Territory by harikiri · · Score: 5, Informative

    I set this up for a few of us at the office, and now we have up to 20 players on a friday afternoon, including some VPN'ing in from home to play.

    We've managed to also include managers and some people 40+ who haven't played FPS games before, and after a week they become a lot more proficient.

    Currently running it on a linux server (700 MHz box next to me), and we play it from our 2.0Ghz desktop PC's.

    Best thing about it.. it is FREE.

    --
    Man watching 6 MSCE's around a sun box, looks alot like the opening scene's of 2001:space odyssey...
    1. Re:Enemy Territory by harikiri · · Score: 5, Informative
      Woops, forgot links:

      Downloads for Enemy Territory (Linux/Windows): here

      The background behind why it's free, is that the developers Splash Damage were working on a single player and multiplayer expansion for Return to Castle Wolfenstein, but in the end ditched the single player version, and released the MP version free!?

      The map we play is small and fun, available from here.

      --
      Man watching 6 MSCE's around a sun box, looks alot like the opening scene's of 2001:space odyssey...
  4. Counterstrike by subzero_ice · · Score: 5, Informative

    How about counterstrike? It doesn't require a high end machine infact P4 1.7 is a over kill for counterstrike.

  5. cube by potpie · · Score: 4, Informative

    Definitely Cube! It's like a basics version of half-life for free.

    http://wouter.fov120.com/cube/

    --
    Esoteric reference.
  6. few ones by Jacek+Poplawski · · Score: 5, Informative

    Try few free (of cost) games:

    strategy

    FreeCiv - new version was just released, FreeCiv is not as good as Civ3 in single player, but it's very playable in mp

    TEG - if you want simple strategy (it's risk clone)

    lgeneral - panzer general clone

    action

    RTCW ET - IMHO best team action game

    Cube - simple multiplayer FPS, with nice graphics

    Armagetron - 3D tron implementation

    sport

    CannonSmash - table tennis simulation

    foobillard- billard simulation

    misc

    Scorched 3D - scorch (or for younger slashdot users: worms) clone

  7. scorched3d by kyjello · · Score: 4, Informative

    If you were a fan of scorched earth then scorched3d shouldn't disapoint. link

    --
    kyjello is too damn smooth to make a signature.
  8. Re:America's Army by Milo_Mindbender · · Score: 4, Informative

    Americas Army (www.americasarmy.com) is great in an office. Particularly because it is totally FREE and runs on Linux, Mac and Windows.

    It's an up-to-date engine (unreal 2003) and seems to work fine even with older cards and laptops that have graphics accelerators. It has lots of adjustments to sound and graphics quality to tune performance for slower machines.

    If you run your own server you can relax the playbalancing requirements so people can get any weapon they want.

    I've found it's kind of a pain sometimes to download, with all the primary sites being slow but if you search for it on Google you can usually find a secondary site or bittorrent server for it.

    There is also a self configuring linux bootable CD of it for people who don't want to install it on their hard drives.

    --

    Milo from Kangaroo Koncepts

  9. Re:No Quake? by iannn · · Score: 5, Informative

    quake 3 should get a perfect 125 fps on a p4 1.7 Ghz. quake 1 should get a perfect 77 fps [with fuhquake.net + better graphics than counterstrike.. actually you can play counterstrike levels if you somehow wanted to] and quake 2 should get, i don't remember.

    i've played q3 for 3 years on a p3 733mhz with a tnt2 and 384mb of ram. i get around 100 fps constant, which is perfectly fine.

    since it doesn't seem to be working for him he's doing something wrong. he probably needs to change settings on his vidio card.
    (1) turn 'anisotropic filtering' off / set 'texture anisotropic setting' to 0 x.
    (2) turn 'vertical sync' off
    (3) set option for 'mipmap detail' to best performance
    (4) set 'hardware acceleration' to full
    (5) in the quake 3 system window lower the resolution to 1024x768, 800x600 or 640x480 (i've always used 640x480).
    (6) in the quake 3 system window choose 'normal' or 'fast'
    (7) if that's not good enough go to www.esreality.com and read how other people do it, there are tons of tricks.

  10. Re:Umm... by frovingslosh · · Score: 4, Informative

    You're dead on. Any of the Quakes would fly on these systems. I even find it hard to believe the question was asked honestly, with the description of those relatively hot systems in the very same sentence! After all, he's talking about boxes that were top of the line two years ago with then brand new Nvidia cards, and claiming they can't be expected to run Quake games that came out two or more years ago!

    --
    I'm an American. I love this country and the freedoms that we used to have.
  11. Ravage's Installers by Floydmon · · Score: 5, Informative

    Ravage has made a bunch of Linux installers for Windows PC games including:

    Alteria
    Devastation
    Duke Nukem 3D: Atomic Edition
    Freespace: The Great War
    Freespace: Silent Threat
    Freespace 2
    Kingpin: Life of Crime
    Medal of Honor: Allied Assault
    Neverwinter Nights
    Neverwinter Nights: Shadows of Undrentide
    Rise of The Triad: Dark War
    Soul Ride
    Tactical Ops: Assault on Terror
    Unreal: Return To Na Pali
    Unreal Gold
    Unreal Tournament 2003 Digital Extremes Bonus Pack
    Unreal Tournament 2003 Epic Bonus Pack One

    All you need is original Windows CD for the games, and possibly some graphics cards tweaking. I've used these installers to get Unreal Tournament and Tactical Ops: Assault on Terror working on my Debian (woody) box.

    Check out the ravage's web site here: http://www.icculus.org/~ravage/

  12. Re:No Quake? by AsbestosRush · · Score: 4, Informative

    Basically, my understanding is that in older clients (q3 and back), you execute certain moves if your machine could run the engine at higher speeds. What Carmack has done is take away that exploit and make the playfield a little more level by taking the hardware out of the equasion. This of course assumes that you have hardware capable of outperforming the system.

    --
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    AC's need not reply
  13. Enemy Territory by bigberk · · Score: 4, Informative

    Nobody's mentioned Enemy Territory yet? This thing is fantastic. It's a special release of Return to Castle Wolfenstein (totally free, and legal) that allows network team play of Allies vs. Axis. Pretty realistic, and definitely runs on slower hardware (I have a 1.2 GHz Duron, and ancient Radeon card). Versions have been released for both Windows and Linux. Here is the distribution site with BitTorrents but the download is available from lots of other places too.

  14. Wrong logic by xintegerx · · Score: 4, Informative

    Phosphors need to be refreshed before they expire. If they start dimming before they are refreshed, then you will notice slight blinking compared to looking at a piece of paper. Your monitor tries to do this at as fast hertz as possible. If 85 hz means that for your monitor, pixels are refreshed before they even start dimming, then you won't ever be sick from it.

    However, when frames are refreshed (in a game), they do not "dim". What I mean is, old frames don't expire. If you are staring at the same thing that doesn't change, it won't matter if it updates 200 frames a second or 1 frame a second--YOU WON'T KNOW. In a game, people will know the difference between 90 fps (fluidity) and 30 fps (not fluid around fast jerking around of mouse.) The person will FEEL the difference in speed. There will be a laggier feel as opposed to the 90 fps. 30 fps doesn't just mean less fps, it also means there's more time needed for the computer to draw that frame before showing it. People will see much faster updates at 90 fps, regardless of hz your mointor supports. 2/3rds of the frames the gamer gets are older than the ones the 90 fps guy gets, only 1/3 (every third) frames might match up with the new 90 fps the faster comp guy gets. You are missing the point about fps. It's not for eye candy. Higher fps makes you a better player, gives faster response time, and allows less bottlenecking. Lower fps shows a deficiency on the computer to run the game properly, and in a low fps case, you know that if it's that low, then networking and other systems might be affected. While at 90 fps, you know that everything is going smoothly for you to get that high.

  15. Re:Umm... by FuzzyBad-Mofo · · Score: 4, Informative

    You do know that Quake 3 runs natively on Linux, right? :)