A new Humble Weekly Bundle has just been released.
Out of the 7 games, 5 are available on Linux:
- World of Goo
- Dungeons of Dredmor
(For 6$ and more)
- Amnesia: The Dark Descent
- AI War: Fleet Command (with 3 DLC)
- Teleglitch: Die Mor Edition (with the Guns and Tunes DLC)
Only two don't support Linux! AI War was only recently ported too!
Good deal? Bad deal? What do you think folks?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6xJghN9vtJQ
Out of the 7 games, 5 are available on Linux:
- World of Goo
- Dungeons of Dredmor
(For 6$ and more)
- Amnesia: The Dark Descent
- AI War: Fleet Command (with 3 DLC)
- Teleglitch: Die Mor Edition (with the Guns and Tunes DLC)
Only two don't support Linux! AI War was only recently ported too!
Good deal? Bad deal? What do you think folks?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6xJghN9vtJQ
Some you may have missed, popular articles from the last month:
Nonsense.
Both the Humble Indie Bundle and the Humble Bundles With Android both drive ports to Linux. The Swapper, Antichamber and Guacamelee were ported as a result of the last bundle. Giana Sisters was supposed to be ported too, but well that didn't happen...
The previous bundle saw the first ports of Papa & Yo, Reus and Joe Danger 2. Dust: An Elysian Tail was likely ported for inclusion in the 11th Bundle (it was ported a month or two before).
No way in hell they are irrelevant.
I spend most of my gaming money on kickstarters now -- it used to be that buying Humble Bundles was the best way to help ensure Indie games got ported to Linux, but now there are lots of Indie teams inspired to support Linux because of solid support from Linux users who back them
They are not irrelevant, but at the same time they are in a far less strong position when it comes to advocating for Linux releases. I mean, would you go to the trouble as a developer to port your game to be included in a Humble Indie Bundle when it could just as easily be placed into a bundle with a lower barrier to entry just a week or so later?
This also devalues the work put in by the developers that do take on the trouble of supporting us, as the advantages they gain compared to everyone else are slim in the context of the promotions themselves, especially since Linux users for some reason still seem willing to support many of these non cross platform bundles.
Which is also ignoring for the moment the DRM free component that they also used to heavily promote, something which has also been weakened and devalued due to their more recent actions.