The day has landed folks. Borderlands 2 is now officially available for Linux and it brings us some excellent FPS action.
Courtesy of our friends at Aspyr Media the new port may have a few rough edges (what new port doesn't?), but it's a really great game to have on our platform. The game is also on sale, so there's never been a better time to pickup a copy, or if you already owned it be sure to grab some DLC to show your support.
Getting games like this shows the strength of our platform, and shows that Gearbox and Aspyr Media both see some sort of gaming future for Linux. We did interview Aspyr Media back in July, so check that out if you haven't already.
I still find it amusing that the head of Gearbox told us not to get our hopes up, and this was going on behind the scenes. When I asked Aspyr about it, they had this to say:
Michael Blair, Aspyr MediaYou know its funny because we just happened to approach 2K/Gearbox about the project right after Randy made those comments and have been working on the port since. We hope we made Gearbox proud with our effort. They are amazing to work with, and we are HUGE fans of their work.
We also spoke to Aspyr Media about how the port went and what they expect from the Borderlands 2 on Linux:
Michael Blair, Aspyr MediaWe are SUPER excited to bring this much beloved franchise to Linux and hope that we continue to meet expectations from the unbelievably supportive Linux gaming community.
This port was challenging, for sure. Performance was at the core of our efforts and while ATI and Intel didn’t make the cut for release, we continue to work on performance for those chipsets and hope to come to a level of performance we can stand behind as gamers in the near future.
Important Note
It is currently only supporting Nvidia graphics cards as it seems the Intel and AMD graphics chips don't give enough performance, but this isn't an issue on Mac. Looks like another driver issue. Would this be a good time to gloat that I use Nvidia? Of course it is! Woo!
In all seriousness though I sincerely hope AMD & Intel put out a quick fixed up drivers to enable all Linux gamers to have a decent experience.
Where do I buy it already?!
Also GameAgent.com which is run by Aspyr Media now supports Linux, so you can support Aspyr directly without Steam taking a cut if that's your thing. Seems like a great way to support the developer directly, and you get Steam keys of course. It was something Linux users requested, so they made it happen.
If you don't want to buy Borderlands 2 from GameAgent then grab Borderlands 2 on Steam. Can't see a reason not to support Aspyr Media directly though.
For this release Aspyr will of course realise there will be a lot of cross-over from people who used Windows/Wine, so this is why it's important to pick up a few DLC packs to not only give Aspyr some income, but to show them we are a market worth continuing and I cannot stress that enough.
I've played a fair bit of it already and absolutely love it. I already loved the Borderlands series of games after playing the first game years ago, but having Borderlands 2 on Linux is pure gold gaming.
The visuals are excellent and the game-play gets really frantic. Any shooter fans will be in heaven with it.
Be sure to let us know how you find it in our comments. This is going to steal a lot of my time away, now if you'll excuse me I have some loot to find and some bandits to annihilate.
Some you may have missed, popular articles from the last month:
Quoting: SeredJust one little thing I find rather annoying is the main page of the steam store right now:
"Coming to STEAMOS Borderlands The Pre-Sequel!"
"Now on STEAMOS Borderlands 2"
Nowhere is mentioned that Linux = SteamOS or rather that SteamOS is just one distro of Linux. Something like "SteamOS/Linux" would be great :/
Just a small thing, as said, yet annoying to me.
I think we just have to get used to this.
Think of it this way: Linux still *need* Valve to succeed on the gaming field. We are totally dependent on them. So to give their distro a little extra push and spotlight, it's really just fair isn't it?
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Also, I hope that AMD and Intel DO NOT add anything to their drivers specifically for one game.
We have enough of that bullshit on Windows and I'd appreciate if we would do it the right way and optimize the games for a certain platform and not a driver to a game -.-
Either game devs learn it, or they should go bankrupt (given the premise that the drivers are good enough out of the box!)
Do NOT get me wrong please. If a driver has a shortcoming or a bug of course it should be fixed asap by the vendor. But having drivers being optimized for certain games and having announcements like "New driver 197.20: Improved performance of *AwesomeGameHere* by 150%" is something I do not under any circumstances be part of the openness of my favorite platform!
We have enough of that bullshit on Windows and I'd appreciate if we would do it the right way and optimize the games for a certain platform and not a driver to a game -.-
Either game devs learn it, or they should go bankrupt (given the premise that the drivers are good enough out of the box!)
Do NOT get me wrong please. If a driver has a shortcoming or a bug of course it should be fixed asap by the vendor. But having drivers being optimized for certain games and having announcements like "New driver 197.20: Improved performance of *AwesomeGameHere* by 150%" is something I do not under any circumstances be part of the openness of my favorite platform!
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Quoting: GuestI'll be waiting to see if it actually does work with fglrx and/or Mesa drivers. Just personally, I don't like the idea of an nvidia-only "release" (public beta is different, but a full release...no).
I also realise this won't make me popular, and I'm sure I'll cop a lot of flak for it, but something smells wrong to me as well. I know AMD's drivers can be very much improved in certain areas (particularly threading), but I'm not convinced that a native (I assume) port couldn't have worked around much of this. Seeing so much else work just fine with both Intel and AMD, or at least to a decent level (even if performance could be increased), I'm going to lay at least some of the blame on Aspyr. That's my opinion, though naturally I'm sure others disagree.
Basically, I'll be watching this closely before I pay any money.
I don't disagree with you entirely, but I would like to remind you that even on Windows, many developers will contact nvidia, AMD, and intel about driver updates that are required for a game. These companies will then issue updated drivers before a game's release, and then the game's installer will include driver updates to ensure people have the required version.
The process in linux is a lot different. Ryan Gordon even addressed this in one of his more recent talks, where he pointed out that some of his ports have been postponed by larger companies because of driver issues. He mentioned that working around bugs or other issues in drivers can take quite a lot of development time, and that sometimes, it's better to just release it with a caveat and let the linux community fix it.
Still, I hope that we can come up with a solid method of fixing these issues before release in the near future.
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Quoting: BeamboomQuoting: SeredJust one little thing I find rather annoying is the main page of the steam store right now:I think we just have to get used to this.
"Coming to STEAMOS Borderlands The Pre-Sequel!"
"Now on STEAMOS Borderlands 2"
Nowhere is mentioned that Linux = SteamOS or rather that SteamOS is just one distro of Linux. Something like "SteamOS/Linux" would be great :/
Just a small thing, as said, yet annoying to me.
Think of it this way: Linux still *need* Valve to succeed on the gaming field. We are totally dependent on them. So to give their distro a little extra push and spotlight, it's really just fair isn't it?
I'm not saying they should not mention SteamOS, I just wished they wouldn't use it as if it were an entirely different platform. I mean if you want to switch to Linux for any given reason and are totally new to this it sounds like the game only runs on SteamOS and not Ubuntu, Mint or anything a newcomer might try out for other work apart from gaming as well.
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Patiently waiting, Borderlands games are one of the reasons I've been dual booting, now I have another reason not to fire up Windows.
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Already bought it on my Mac. Hope this has paid Aspyr.
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I wonder if this is a success if they'll go back & port the first game as well?
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just bought the game of the year edition :) missing executable on fedora 20 :(
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Quoting: lucifertdarkI wonder if this is a success if they'll go back & port the first game as well?Borderlands was ported by Feral, not Aspyr. I do hope Feral will bring Borderlands to Linux as well, however.
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Quoting: ZilentIs it available to download cause i can't?
same here, on fedora 20 the download doesn't start (missing executable)
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