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Steam For Linux: A Respectable Showing

An anonymous reader writes "Valve has just released its February, 2013 Steam Hardware & Software Survey, and the results are absolutely mind blowing. Linux is now standing strong as a legitimate gaming platform. It now represents 2.02% of all active Steam users." That's in keeping with what new submitter lars_doucet found. Lars writes: "I'm an independent game developer lucky enough to be on Steam. Recently, the Steam Linux client officially went public and was accompanied by a site-wide sale. The Linux sale featured every single Linux-compatible game on the service, including our cross-platform game Defender's Quest. .... Bottom line: during the sale we saw nearly 3 times as many Linux sales of the game as Mac (Windows still dominated overall)."

15 of 372 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Direct link to results by Maxx169 · · Score: 5, Informative

    32 bit windows 8. X64 Windows 8 has 9% share...

  2. 2.02% so quickly? by blind+biker · · Score: 5, Interesting

    That's not bad at all. Is Microsoft shaking in their boots? Not really. Are they watching carefully? You get your ass. Is this an opportunity to upend the horrorshow that is Windows 8? I hope so.

    Is answering your own questions a bit douchy? Perhaps.

    --
    "The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
    1. Re:2.02% so quickly? by blind+biker · · Score: 5, Funny

      Mentally replace "get" with "bet" to make sense of the comment above. Is this embarrassing? A bit. Did I laugh when I noticed the mistake? You get your ass.

      --
      "The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
    2. Re:2.02% so quickly? by Ragzouken · · Score: 5, Funny

      You don't get a lot for free in life, but at least you get your ass.

    3. Re:2.02% so quickly? by murdocj · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Nope. That's why Valve is doing this... to avoid having MS having them by the balls.

    4. Re:2.02% so quickly? by Lonewolf666 · · Score: 5, Informative

      I think Valve (the owner of Steam) are going for Linux because they are afraid Microsoft will eventually turn Windows into a "walled garden" like Apple's iOS, introduce their own application store and force out competitors like Steam.

      Gabe Newell said:

      We want to make it as easy as possible for the 2,500 games on Steam to run on Linux as well. It is a hedging strategy. I think Windows 8 is a catastrophe for everyone in the PC space.

      quoted from http://www.ign.com/articles/2012/07/26/gabe-newell-windows-8-is-a-catastrophe

      --
      C - the footgun of programming languages
  3. Re:A respectable showing. by Gregg+M · · Score: 5, Informative
    2% - the same market share as Windows Phone 7/8

    Yes 2% share in a few weeks VS a gigantic company that has thrown billions into advertising.

    --
    Linux is only free if your time has no value. Windows is only free if you threaten to use Linux.
  4. Don't Count Your Chickens by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Right now it's brand new and much-hyped, we could easily be dealing with a case of regression to the mean.
    Let's see how the numbers looks 6 months down the road.

    --
    When information is power, privacy is freedom.
  5. Re: Too bad they're selling broken games by vux984 · · Score: 5, Informative

    You buy the indie bundle... humble bundles for example and you are entitled to a DRM free copy. Awesome.

    You use the steam key anyway because its as easy as using any other linux package manager. You select what you want, you click play and a few minutes later your playing. You switch to your laptop up stairs, launch steam, click what you want ... and start playing.

    The DRM free direct downloads are great in the event steam fails or is down or something. But honestly, for all that I dislike about steam, it is easy to use. I use GoG a lot too, but find myself wishing that I could download and install those games via steam as well. Its just nice not to have all the clutter of manual downloads, manual patches, expansion packs, etc.

  6. Re:Wow by UltraZelda64 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ever hear of growth? You have to start somewhere. I'd say it's not bad. Just give it time, you're passing judgment too soon.

  7. Re:Wow by pipatron · · Score: 5, Funny

    And the requirement for joining Mensa is that you belong to the top 2% of the population, rated by IQ. Coincidence? I think not!

    --
    c++; /* this makes c bigger but returns the old value */
  8. Re:Windows Phone. 5% = Failure. Linux 2% = Victory by MrKaos · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Bing market share = failure. Linux 2% = Victory.

    5% of the market leader is a failure, 2% for the market trailer is a success.

    --
    My ism, it's full of beliefs.
  9. wtf by kelemvor4 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    A respectable showing? The steam client may be the greatest thing ever but there isn't even a single current AAA title available. Not one. The biggest game they've got is half-life 1. It was released in 1998. 15 years ago. That's something we should be getting from gog.com. This looks to me like a token effort in order to get some cheap advertising on Linux friendly sites such as Slashdot.
    News flash, that game's so old it probably plays perfectly in wine anyway. When steam for Linux starts getting AAA titles within a few weeks of the windows release then they will have something worth talking about.

  10. Re:Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Firstly, I'd wager that the effort Valve has put in to Linux support is pretty much 2% of their total. The way they seem to work is to undertake a lot of different things, most of which aren't wildly profitable.

    Secondly: games on linux is a chicken-and-egg thing. I use *ux daily for work, but my home desktop has been a windows machine forever, because I sometimes want to play games. Most (but not all) of the games I play are Valve titles, so being able to play them on ux makes it more likely I'd give linux on the desktop a serious try, or recommend it to a friend, than before. If they can bring more big developers to the platform (either through improving emulation, or by leveraging the upcoming "steambox" to encourage developers to make their games compatible), then Linux on the desktop becomes a viable choice for home computers for a lot of people that it just isn't at the moment, and then selling games to Linux users becomes more profitable in a spiral of awesomeness.

    Every publisher seems to have their own Steam-like service, and the threat of Xbox Live, Windows8 Marketplace and Win8 phones actually interoperating to give one Steam-like system across the PC, pocket and living room is obviously a huge threat. As we've seen time and again, if you're beholden to Microsoft for your business, then you won't be in business for long, so they are pushing an alternate platform through a number of avenues and initiatives to make sure that they have a Plan B for when MS decides that they want to be the sole gatekeeper for the entire Windows games market.

  11. I have used it since the beta by xarragon · · Score: 5, Informative

    I have actually used it since the beta invite popped into my inbox. For those of you who havn't tried it here is a short summary:

    I run Arch Linux, which is not supported. Valve only supports Ubuntu and provides the software as a .deb file which contains the "bootstrapper", basically a "netinstall" version if you were to make a comparision to the average Linux distro. The bootstrapper is easily taken apart via a script in the custom installer program that some of the Arch Linux folks whipped up and ends up installed system-wide by default.

    This caused some problems for people like me, who are too paranoid to install untrusted software system-wide or even in my own home directory. I gave it a separate user account and denied the installer root access (which it asked for every time it tried to auto-update). It cried and bugged out, but you could run TF2 from day one. As they continued to improve the software they actually listened to the complaints at github (where they keep their Linux issue tracker) and made the software runnable as a regular user. It now resides completely inside my 'steam' users directory and the bootstrapper is long gone from the system-wide install.

    If you are like me, and only run ALSA, hating PulseAudio's tentacle guts, you can actually run Steam anyway. They are using SDL as the backend, so when launching Steam you just export SDL_AUDIODRIVER=alsa before running it, and you'll get sound! Even in-game voice is operational, but you still can't permanently disable it to get rid of all the jackasses screaming into the microphones.

    Steam itself still uses the look from it's Windows roots, the ugly custom-skinned UI. And it can't be resized on my machine, which runs PekWM. It is also slow as molasses to start, and so is TF2. That might be in part to me using ONLY a 3G modem for my gaming though. The store also works like a charm.

    An interesting feature is that you can actually switch between the OpenGL game window and the rest of your desktops seamlessly, with no apparent bugs or performance loss. Faster and more painless than on Windows. This wasn't always the case though, as early versions would switch to your desktop as soon as you got an archievement and completely screw up your mouse input once you switched back. This has been long since fixed though.

    The only recent bug I came across was an apparent lack of support for multi-user environments, where I once started the bootstrapper as my regular user by mistake and let it install, thinking it was an regular update. Once it was up I figured what was wrong, uninstalling it and starting up as the 'steam' user, whereas it sefaulted hard. It took several hours and a lot of support ticket reading to figure out that leftover temporary file descriptors left from the first session screwed up the second one. Kinda stupid bug for a modern software, but that's what beta testing is for I suppose.

    For me, Valve has really made my Linux experience a lot better. Hat's off to them. Now I just need to find some TF2 servers with players that are as beligerent and offensive as me!