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Show Your Support For Unity3D Editor On Linux

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Not something I usually do, but this is a good cause, Unity is still missing having it's actual editor on Linux!

This item on their community feedback list needs votes from interested gamers and developers to show Unity there is demand for its editor on Linux.
It currently has 3,198 votes so it may have a way to go before being properly recognised, but it's a worthy cause.

Sadly it seems the vote has being going on since December 2010 and Unity have yet to act on it despite it being the number 1 item on their feedback page. Hopefully a big push on this can get them to recognise it as a priority.

After all we need more than just Leadwerks and C4 on Linux to keep competition going right?

Are there any other major game tools you know of that run on Linux you want us to highlight, share them in the comments! Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
Tags: Editorial, Unity
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About the author -
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I am the owner of GamingOnLinux. After discovering Linux back in the days of Mandrake in 2003, I constantly checked on the progress of Linux until Ubuntu appeared on the scene and it helped me to really love it. You can reach me easily by emailing GamingOnLinux directly. You can also follow my personal adventures on Bluesky.
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17 comments

Sabun Sep 17, 2013
Voted! I've been using Unity 3.5 and 4.1 for the past 6 months. It definitely needs to run on Linux itself. It's a real pain for me to have to export my game in Windows, and then transfer it onto a drive that is neutral between OS's and then load into Ubuntu to test it (only to find that something's a little off!).
Peter Sep 17, 2013
Liam Dawe Sep 17, 2013
There is also a petition running on change.org: https://www.change.org/petitions/unity-technologies-bring-the-unity-editor-to-linux
Pretty pointless when the one I've highlighted is actually on the developers website.
jota87r Sep 17, 2013
Post this on subreddit /r/linux_gaming so we can get extra votes. Also you could gain extra visitors to your website ;)
Liam Dawe Sep 17, 2013
Post this on subreddit /r/linux_gaming so we can get extra votes. Also you could gain extra visitors to your website ;)
It is preferable if other people do this as I don't want to seem like a spammer ;)
AmigaFan Sep 17, 2013
I signed it a while ago. It's the highest rated vote on their site, but it's not even been considered since 2010. Maybe they'll surprise us, but I'm not holding my breath.

I tried running it through wine, but the objects disappear when I test the scene, something which others also have a problem with.

You can also bump up the following thread on their site.

http://forum.unity3d.com/threads/183616-Linux-client
Anonymous Sep 17, 2013
Polycode looks like a promising open-source alternative, it needs more love.
Anonymous Sep 17, 2013
I think, that we also need Unity web player for Linux very much:
http://feedback.unity3d.com/unity/all-categories/1/top/active/linux-support-for-webplayer 
n30p1r4t3 Sep 17, 2013
Voted!
Cheeseness Sep 18, 2013
It's worth highlighting that this is currently the most voted for item on feedback.unity3d.com by about 1,000 votes, and has been the highest voted item for some time (I first noticed it a couple of weeks ago).
ksd Sep 18, 2013
Stencyl (http://www.stencyl.com/) - a 2D game engine/creator has a native version for Ubuntu (requires the non-free JVM). It has an easy to use drag and drop method to design your games. You can make your games on Ubuntu and publish for iOS, Android*, Flash, HTML5*, Windows and Mac (* As of Stencyl 3.0). The full featured free version is available for download and can publish to 'Flash'.
Liam Dawe Sep 18, 2013
Stencyl (http://www.stencyl.com/) - a 2D game engine/creator has a native version for Ubuntu (requires the non-free JVM). It has an easy to use drag and drop method to design your games. You can make your games on Ubuntu and publish for iOS, Android*, Flash, HTML5*, Windows and Mac (* As of Stencyl 3.0). The full featured free version is available for download and can publish to 'Flash'.
I just checked this out. Have shot them an email with questions.
Cheeseness Sep 18, 2013
Stencyl (http://www.stencyl.com/) - a 2D game engine/creator has a native version for Ubuntu (requires the non-free JVM).
I'm involved with a Stencyl project. I haven't found it hugely inspiring, but the people I'm collaborating with seem happy with it. For that project, I'm only working on art assets though.
pixelRainbow Sep 19, 2013
10 votes given. :)
Sslaxx Sep 20, 2013
I'm not even sure they'd have officially supported Linux (as opposed to it having prior been an unofficial in-development thing) if it hadn't been for Wasteland 2. Maybe we need to try and get people like Brian Fargo et al involved?
s_d Oct 6, 2013
I'm not even sure they'd have officially supported Linux (as opposed to it having prior been an unofficial in-development thing) if it hadn't been for Wasteland 2. Maybe we need to try and get people like Brian Fargo et al involved?

Totally agree.  They pretty much blew us off for nearly a decade with Linux export as the highest voted feature, until magically they claimed to have it "in the works" and ready for Unity 4.  As a "preview".  Right after Wasteland 2 completes it's funding and announces their engine.

We think 4k votes looks nice?  Try 14k for Linux engine support.

I remember folks trying to explain the value proposition to them in one huge ~500 post thread (and getting trolled really hard, regardless of whether or not they were coherent): http://forum.unity3d.com/threads/915-Linux-Support-D

I don't think they really care much about us, to be honest (except their Linux liaison, NaTosha Bard, who seems to actually be a Linux gamer herself, as well as a dev).  To me, they seem more to be satisfying their contractual obligations to their licensees.
Cheeseness Oct 6, 2013
During 7DFPS, when I mentioned that the reason I didn't choose to use Unity (spite of owning a pro licence) was because I wanted an all-native Linux workflow, Joe Robins, a Community Evangelist for Unity responded with:
mmm.. We are certainly looking at that

This on its own isn't news. Companies (smart ones at least) are always looking at options, and that's no indication that those options will be pursued soon or at all - Joe was hasty to point out that it wasn't an announcement.

That said, it is positive and hopefully indicates that there might be something newsworthy on this front down the track.
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