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Thanks To Valve, More Than 1,500 Games Are Now On Linux

An anonymous reader writes: The Steam Store crossed the threshold this morning of having 1,500 games natively available for Linux. Timberman, a 0.99$ video game was the 1,500th title, but while there are a lot of indie games available for Linux, in the past three years have been a number of high profile AAA Linux games too. What games (old or new, free or paid) would you like to see available for Linux systems?

13 of 281 comments (clear)

  1. 99% shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    99% of these games are shit - but so is 99% of everything

  2. Open world city by jones_supa · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What games (old or new, free or paid) would you like to see available for Linux systems?

    This is kind of obvious answer...but some big open world "dicking around in a city" game like Grand Theft Auto, Saints Row or Sleeping Dogs would be nice to see.

    1. Re:Open world city by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Try Tux Racer

    2. Re:Open world city by revford · · Score: 4, Informative

      Saints Row IV is coming to Linux later this year. http://store.steampowered.com/...

  3. Re:Blizard Games by binarylarry · · Score: 3, Informative

    They run really well on Wine.

    --
    Mod me down, my New Earth Global Warmingist friends!
  4. Those I play by leegaard · · Score: 4, Informative

    The games I play - and the only reason I am still on windows:
    -Everything Blizzard makes (WoW, Diablo, Starcraft, Hearthstone, Heroes of the storm and Overwatch when it becomes available.
    -Battlefield (and derivatives, including Star Wars Battelfront)

    Blizzard should be able to do something since they already have support for OSX.
    EA could be a bigger problem.

    I spend a lot of time in steam games - and welcome all they have done for gaming on Linux. I loath wrappers though as they have a tendency to cost on perfomance an example is Civilization V on Linux is painful compared to windows on trhe same machine.

    1. Re:Those I play by phantomfive · · Score: 5, Funny

      EA could be a bigger problem.

      Yeah, EA has problems making their titles work right on Windows.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  5. FreeBSD by unixisc · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Dear Valve

    Can you work w/ the FreeBSD project to make this available on the BSDs as well? I'd love to play Civ V on this laptop running PC-BSD

  6. Re:civ by godrik · · Score: 3, Informative

    You do know that civilization V runs on Linux, don't you? And provided you have a discrete graphics cards, it runs pretty well.

  7. Popular games by godrik · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Actually, I think the most important games to get to run on Linux are games that are popular with the general gaming population. Videos games are parts of 21st century general culture. Being able to access (play) them would be a good step forward.

    Of course, I'd love some weirder, less common games to be available as well.

  8. Steam has been great for Mac too! by Zobeid · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I can't remember ever seeing a Linux game on Steam that didn't also work on the Mac. I think if you use Valve's tool set to create Linux games, Mac compatibility is a "freebie". This has been huge for Mac gamers. Before Steam, Mac gaming was a wasteland. Now it's viable.

  9. Re:Not good enough by Kjella · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Not that I'm going to really dispute anything you said, but never is a very long time. There's a huge section of the smartphone, tablet and console gaming market that doesn't and won't run DirectX, so even ignoring Steam and the PC there's a solid future for OpenGL. And with Vulkan doing significantly less there's hope that Linux support in general and open source support in particular will be much better. I mean, Valve has already written an open source driver for Intel, it took two developers two weeks and is ~27 kLoC - though I assume they generously copied bits and pieces from the mesa driver. The GLSL to SPIR-V compilation comes on top but it's generic and already written, it's only the SPIR-V to target that is unique for each card. Android has already picked it as their next-gen API, that's certainly not a bad ally.

    If Vulkan can become a first party rendering target for Source 2, Unity, Unreal Engine 4 and CryENGINE which I assume they will since they don't want to lose the smartphone/tablet business, the hurdle to produce an AAA game on Linux is that much lower. Maybe the bar still won't be low enough, but lower than it is today. Particularly if Valve paves the way with a good first party title or two, if a year from now Half-Life 3 launches with same day Linux support a lot could change in the next few years. Then again, it might also be just wishful thinking...

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  10. Steam? More like Humble Bundle. by TheLongshot · · Score: 4, Informative

    Humble Bundle has ported over a hundred games to Linux, so they deserve a lot of credit for actually making Linux games, rather than just creating a store to sell them.

    http://blog.humblebundle.com/p...