Don't want to see articles from a certain category? When logged in, go to your User Settings and adjust your feed in the Content Preferences section where you can block tags!
We do often include affiliate links to earn us some pennies. See more here.

Metro: Last Light Released for Linux on Steam

By -
In normal circumstances I would have let Liam deliver these awesome news, but what is normal about a total nuclear catastrophe in the radioactive ruins of Moscow? Especially when that happens on Linux?

Anyways, the horror FPS Metro: Last Light from 4A Games and published by Deepsilver has finally been released on Steam for Linux. There had been hints about the closing release date on SteamDB during the past few weeks, so the release wasn't a complete surprise, but we didn't expect it to happen so suddenly.

I think this is one of the important milestones in the history of Linux gaming. It's not the first big game on Linux and probably not the last, but we are seeing big game studios finally take Linux seriously as a gaming platform. Would you have believed all this few years ago?

Game info:

Metro: Last Light is a first person horror shooter set into post-apocalyptic Moscow, which has been devastated by a nuclear war. The surviving population of Moscow has taken refuge in the metro tunnels below the radioactive streets, where all kinds of mutants roam. But to quote another game with a similar topic: "war never changes" and the people living in the metro tunnels have divided into different factions, which fight with each other for survival. You play as Artyom, a young dweller of the metro, and you must sort out this mess as "the last light in our darkest hour".

Features:
  • Experience thrilling combat with an exotic arsenal of hand-made weaponry against deadly foes – both human and mutant – and use stealth to launch attacks under the cover of darkness
  • Explore the post-apocalyptic world of the Moscow Metro, one of the most immersive, atmospheric game worlds ever created
  • Fight for every bullet and every last breath in a claustrophobic blend of survival horror and FPS gameplay
  • Next generation technology boasting stunning lighting and physics sets a new graphical benchmark on both console and PC


YouTube Thumbnail
YouTube videos require cookies, you must accept their cookies to view. View cookie preferences.
Accept Cookies & Show   Direct Link



The game is currently (slowly) downloading on Steam, so I haven't yet had a chance to play it, but I am sure to make a GOL Cast of it ASAP! Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
Tags: FPS, Horror, Steam
0 Likes
About the author -
author picture
I'm a Linux gamer from Finland. I like reading, long walks on the beach, dying repeatedly in roguelikes and ripping and tearing in FPS games. I also sometimes write code and sometimes that includes hobbyist game development.
See more from me
The comments on this article are closed.
All posts need to follow our rules. For users logged in: please hit the Report Flag icon on any post that breaks the rules or contains illegal / harmful content. Guest readers can email us for any issues.
73 comments
Page: «2/4»
  Go to:

Lord Avallon Nov 5, 2013
It was in my wishlist already, only waiting for the money to buy this baby!
Shmerl Nov 5, 2013
I'm not excited that it's only available through Steam (so I'm not getting it naturally). Just wrote to Deep Silver and asked if they are going to release it DRM free without Steam anywhere. Otherwise it would be a pity if such game will remain Steamed forever.
Guest Nov 5, 2013
Edit: update.

First 15 minutes of game play:

View video on youtube.com

Doing a let's play on it.
Xpander Nov 5, 2013
Superb.. played it a bit yesterday..had to go to sleep because early wake though..cant wait when i get home from work to play more :)

View video on youtube.com
hero900 Nov 5, 2013
wow this is really awesome will get it soon
fabertawe Nov 5, 2013
Hi folks, just registered, nice to meet you all :D

Downloading now at just over 7 MB/S, 13 minutes to go!

@OZSeaford - I've just upgraded from a GTX460 to a GTX660 and I'm seeing an improvement in fps of between 30% and 50% in the games I've tried. Unigine Heaven went from 27 to 40 fps at 1680 x 1050.

(AMD Phenom II X4 965 / ASUS M4A87TD EVO / Arch x86_64)
OZSeaford Nov 5, 2013
Hi folks, just registered, nice to meet you all :D

Downloading now at just over 7 MB/S, 13 minutes to go!

@OZSeaford - I've just upgraded from a GTX460 to a GTX660 and I'm seeing an improvement in fps of between 30% and 50% in the games I've tried. Unigine Heaven went from 27 to 40 fps at 1680 x 1050.

(AMD Phenom II X4 965 / ASUS M4A87TD EVO / Arch x86_64)

Well that is fantastic news. I can't even begin to imagine what it will do from my current GeForce 8600 GT (which was more than sufficient for all my Linux games up to now) to the GTX660 if you are experiencing 30/50% increase from just a 2 generation difference.
tigerpanzer Nov 5, 2013
I'm not excited that it's only available through Steam (so I'm not getting it naturally). Just wrote to Deep Silver and asked if they are going to release it DRM free without Steam anywhere. Otherwise it would be a pity if such game will remain Steamed forever.
Same here, I'm totally turned off by Steam now. I use to be a fan but this whole SteamOS thing has turned sour and I'm done with Steam, It's bad news for Linux.
fabertawe Nov 5, 2013
I've played a couple of hours today and it's really good (IMO obviously :P).

Can't comment on frame rate other than it runs mostly smoothly, even when I turned up the graphics "slider" fully. Lowering the slider does make things smoother still and there's a noticeable drop in "sharpness" of graphical quality.

The only glitches were an occasional partial clipping when in very close proximity with another game character and an occasional slight stuttering in audio at the end of the transitions between "levels" (for want of a better description) where your character talks and "press any key to continue" is displayed.

Good stuff!
scaine Nov 5, 2013
View PC info
  • Contributing Editor
  • Mega Supporter
Humble Bundle might have started a pebble rolling down the mountain, but it would still be up there in the peaks if it wasn't the mighty push that Valve gave it when they started encouraging developers to go Linux all those months ago. They're not perfect, but I don't see how they've "turned sour" and are now "bad news for Linux".
Qydfac Nov 5, 2013
I need to put in an invoice quick to pay for all this loveliness :D

I'm not excited that it's only available through Steam (so I'm not getting it naturally). Just wrote to Deep Silver and asked if they are going to release it DRM free without Steam anywhere. Otherwise it would be a pity if such game will remain Steamed forever.
Same here, I'm totally turned off by Steam now. I use to be a fan but this whole SteamOS thing has turned sour and I'm done with Steam, It's bad news for Linux.
 
I hear you, we have had the revolution, the evolution is crawling along like a wounded slug though.
Samsai Nov 5, 2013
Yeah sure, having awesome games on Linux is most certainly bad news for Linux...
I understand that DRM is not a good thing, but DRM-free or not, having these games on Linux _is_ good news, either directly or indirectly.

I would like you to read this part of their Linux release announcement:
4A Games and AMD are working together on improving performance on Linux and waiting for updated drivers from the graphics card manufacturer.
http://steamcommunity.com/games/MetroVideoGame/announcements/detail/1841138399631172025

That means improved graphics performance on AMD, which at the moment is fairly horrible. If this isn't good news for Linux, then I'm fairly sure nothing is.
Shmerl Nov 5, 2013
Better drivers and so on - are good news for Linux. Majority of games which drive those changes using DRM - are bad news.
Dima Nov 5, 2013
This is a turning point for us. Cheers!
Caldazar Nov 5, 2013
@Shmerl
I see your point but really, it's not a question of life or death.
It's no rootkit, not even Ubuntuesque spyware and there are no starving children either just because some DRM'd games are available on Linux.

Honestly, it's a question of reduced value, nothing more.
I rent a game for as long as it takes me to get banned on Steam and that's exactly what I'm willing to pay for.

Nothing of that reduces my respect for them for the huge risk and effort they're dedicating to Linux.
Shmerl Nov 5, 2013
Supporting DRM is inherently bad, since it helps its proliferation. I hope we don't need to go into lengthy discussion why DRM itself is bad. But it's bad enough to avoid it outright. So there is some conflict here. You might want to support games which push better drivers, but you don't want to support ones which proliferate DRM. For me second issue has higher priority.
scaine Nov 5, 2013
View PC info
  • Contributing Editor
  • Mega Supporter
Supporting DRM is inherently bad, since it helps its proliferation. I hope we don't need to go into lengthy discussion why DRM itself is bad. But it's bad enough to avoid it outright. So there is some conflict here. You might want to support games which push better drivers, but you don't want to support ones which proliferate DRM. For me second issue has higher priority.

That's an admirable stance, but not one I can get behind, sorry. It's a little too Stallman for me. If you take that stance and apply it to everything in your life you'll be giving up a fair list of things. In fact, off the top of my head: every console, Steam, some Desura, all Apple products, most Android products (unless you bypass Play and take your chance on the malware infested third party appstores), every Bluray disk, BBC iPlayer, Netflix, Lovefilm (pretty much every online film repository bar Youtube), most DVD's (the ones encoded with CSS certainly, and good luck knowing which are before you buy them), most e-books and certainly anything to do with Kindle. There's probably lot of other examples, but most of that list affects me directly.

In fact, about the only thing that isn't governed by DRM digitally these days is music. And probably that only because of radio stations.

So, yeah, pretty admirable. But not for me. I like a balance, and a little DRM is acceptable provided it in no way gets in my way. And for me, Steam doesn't.
scaine Nov 5, 2013
View PC info
  • Contributing Editor
  • Mega Supporter
You know, I've just realised that this awesome news about Metro comes just one week before the incredible PixelJunk Shooter releases on Ubuntu via Steam too! I'm gonna have to work hard at not getting divorced over the next couple of weeks! :D
Caldazar Nov 5, 2013
@shmerl
Sure, same priority here.
All I'm saying is: Voting with your wallet has the great advantage of providing more fine grained answers than just "yes" and "no".

No freedom to lend it to a friend? Minus 5$.
(As long as DRM doesn't come as malware or has any negative impact on my system of course)

And Hey! No disrespect for Stallman please! :) He's right, it's unethical.
Shmerl Nov 5, 2013
That's an admirable stance, but not one I can get behind, sorry. It's a little too Stallman for me. If you take that stance and apply it to everything in your life you'll be giving up a fair list of things. In fact, off the top of my head: every console, Steam, some Desura, all Apple products, most Android products (unless you bypass Play and take your chance on the malware infested third party appstores), every Bluray disk, BBC iPlayer, Netflix, Lovefilm (pretty much every online film repository bar Youtube), most DVD's (the ones encoded with CSS certainly, and good luck knowing which are before you buy them), most e-books and certainly anything to do with Kindle. There's probably lot of other examples, but most of that list affects me directly.

In fact, about the only thing that isn't governed by DRM digitally these days is music. And probably that only because of radio stations.

So, yeah, pretty admirable. But not for me. I like a balance, and a little DRM is acceptable provided it in no way gets in my way. And for me, Steam doesn't.

That's what I do :) I reject DRM in general. DVDs are an exception, since that DRM is obsolete essentially, so I don't consider that to be DRM really. libdvdcss is anyway the only way to play DVDs on Linux. Blurays? Never used those, I think they are irrelevant since disks are dying out anyway.

Apple? Oh, horror, I don't even come near that for many other reasons besides DRM. Netflix? No go (clear DRM which even aggressively attempts to push it into HTML standard - even more reasons to reject it). E-books? I buy DRM free only (no Kindle or anything like that). There are DRM free e-books available, the situation is much better than movies which are limited to DVDs mostly.

I don't use Android for mobile, but not so much out of DRM concerns, but because I prefer proper glibc mobile Linux (Harmattan, Nemo, upcoming Sailfish and so on, but that's another story).

So, obviously I don't buy any games with DRM as well.

I don't really think it's extreme - it's the only way to actually vote with your wallet, since if you are indifferent, DRM only strives more.
While you're here, please consider supporting GamingOnLinux on:

Reward Tiers: Patreon. Plain Donations: PayPal.

This ensures all of our main content remains totally free for everyone! Patreon supporters can also remove all adverts and sponsors! Supporting us helps bring good, fresh content. Without your continued support, we simply could not continue!

You can find even more ways to support us on this dedicated page any time. If you already are, thank you!
The comments on this article are closed.