Some of you may be wondering what happened to the Linux release of the new Gauntlet game, well we have the answer for you.
The odd thing about this whole thing is that they publicly confirmed Linux support, and when pre-orders became available Linux was listed as a platform, and then removed.
Suddenly we're here. Gauntlet has a release date and can be preordered! http://t.co/yk5HnxzATO pic.twitter.com/7BJ7K5bj9o
— Arrowhead (@arrowheadgs) May 21, 2014
We have reached out to the developers who have confirmed it was delayed for Steam Machines:
@gamingonlinux It will not have general support of Linux, but will support the SteamOS Linux when that version becomes available.
— Arrowhead (@arrowheadgs) September 23, 2014
@gamingonlinux Most likely it will come along the Steam Machines, but Warner will also be big part of setting those plans.
— Arrowhead (@arrowheadgs) September 23, 2014
It's a bit of a shame for them to to do that, but they confirmed it's also part of a decision from the publisher:
@gamingonlinux Often it's a discussion and joint decision but the final say is always up to them.
Arrowhead (@arrowheadgs) September 23, 2014
Official About
The classic Gauntlet 4-player co-op action gameplay returns in a completely new experience! Play as one of four distinct heroes in an intense monster filled dungeon brawler with a combination of both uniquely built and randomly generated levels to explore. Battle the endless hordes of foes as you and your friends fight for treasure and glory via both local and online co-op multiplayer. Invade the Darkness this Summer on PC and Steam Machines!
Check out Gauntlet on Steam now, but don't buy it until they release the Linux version.
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Quoting: MohandevirMmmm... Wondering if it has something to do with MIR and Ubuntu announced xorg "legacy" support...
Just hypothetical but MIR is coming to Unity (Ubuntu) and Canonical could decide to implement the support for the SteamOS version of Xorg. I might be wrong.
This would explain why Ubuntu is still recommended by Valve for developpers but it would cause à lot of problems to other distros if they intend to drop Xorg in favor of Wayland...
There is still xmir and xwayland for xorg support but steamos and many other distros will stick with xorg for quite a while ahead display server is quite a vital component that just has to work I doubt valve would want to make a switch and risk braking steamos boxes with out a proven track record for ither mir/wayland.
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Quoting: MaokeiQuoting: MohandevirMmmm... Wondering if it has something to do with MIR and Ubuntu announced xorg "legacy" support...There is still xmir and xwayland for xorg support but steamos and many other distros will stick with xorg for quite a while ahead display server is quite a vital component that just has to work I doubt valve would want to make a switch and risk braking steamos boxes with out a proven track record for ither mir/wayland.
Just hypothetical but MIR is coming to Unity (Ubuntu) and Canonical could decide to implement the support for the SteamOS version of Xorg. I might be wrong.
This would explain why Ubuntu is still recommended by Valve for developpers but it would cause à lot of problems to other distros if they intend to drop Xorg in favor of Wayland...
I get what you mean and it's logical but I'm not talking about SteamOS switching Xorg. For sure, they won't. Not for quite a while. What I'm talking about is Xmir for Ubuntu that could be a copy of SteamOS'custom Xorg, the one Valve is using atm.
Anyway, we are speculating...
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"It will not have general support of Linux, but will support the SteamOS Linux when that version becomes available." What a bunch of bull...
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I guess the only conclusion we can draw from this is that their spokesperson don't know a whole lot about Linux.
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I'm ok with this. I am glad to hear that Warner will be involved in Steam Machise sales. I want them to succeed, so the more heavyweight players getting involved, the better!
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I'll point out that CIV V, which was developed specifically for SteamOS, has been reported to run perfectly on SteamOS, Debian, Ubuntu, Red Hat/Fedora, Arch, and Slackware.
Yes, the stuff about Xorg is problematical, but I think that Good Programming Practices will win the day.
Yes, the stuff about Xorg is problematical, but I think that Good Programming Practices will win the day.
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Quoting: sigzNot so sure, Valve is implementing more and more modifications to Xorg and linux kernel to have a nice gaming platform. As they said at debconf, these patches will not be upstreamed, so there is chances steamOS ends as a "not so compatible" linux distribution, like android now.
Not entirely true - they said that some patches are very specific to their vision and thus may not be suitable for general use, but if the community decides to implement them upstream, they have no objections to that. Personally, after watching the presentation, I'm rather content that they're going for hand tailoring the distro for the gaming needs and more than ever convinced to buy a steambox as soon as it's released.
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Quoting: sigzThere is only a fews guys working on Steam OS right now, there are not going to X.Org all by themselves, they are just doing performance hacks (like getting rid of the lines of codes existing only for legacy hardware or software configurations).Quoting: MaokeiNot general support for linux but steamos it's the same damn thing. So probably some time next year.Not so sure, Valve is implementing more and more modifications to Xorg and linux kernel to have a nice gaming platform. As they said at debconf, these patches will not be upstreamed, so there is chances steamOS ends as a "not so compatible" linux distribution, like android now.
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I'm glad I didn't pre-order this on the strength of their promise of Linux support, i'll wait till it's out for Linux before I give them any money now.
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