The open world pirate RPG Raven’s Cry has been released with day one Linux support.
The game features some impressive AAA quality graphics and it’s an encouraging sign to see these kinds of games released on Linux at the same time as Windows now and also a couple of months before console releases.
Raven’s Cry looks promising in terms of story and setting, featuring historically accurate architecture from the 18th century, a morality system, side-quests and economy system. However, the game does seem to be plagued by the usual release issues with a few bugs here and there along with performance issues.
These issues appear to occur across all platforms and aren't exclusive to Linux. From what I have seen, the game appears to run under Linux but those wanting better performance may want to wait until a patch is released.
I haven’t had a chance to play the game and test it myself, so if anyone who has it wants to share their experiences here, it would be useful for those looking to buy the game. If the bugs are ironed out, I will most likely get the game myself since I’m itching to play an open world RPG with an interesting story.
Check out Raven's Cry on Steam.
The game features some impressive AAA quality graphics and it’s an encouraging sign to see these kinds of games released on Linux at the same time as Windows now and also a couple of months before console releases.
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Raven’s Cry looks promising in terms of story and setting, featuring historically accurate architecture from the 18th century, a morality system, side-quests and economy system. However, the game does seem to be plagued by the usual release issues with a few bugs here and there along with performance issues.
These issues appear to occur across all platforms and aren't exclusive to Linux. From what I have seen, the game appears to run under Linux but those wanting better performance may want to wait until a patch is released.
I haven’t had a chance to play the game and test it myself, so if anyone who has it wants to share their experiences here, it would be useful for those looking to buy the game. If the bugs are ironed out, I will most likely get the game myself since I’m itching to play an open world RPG with an interesting story.
Check out Raven's Cry on Steam.
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Imo the graphics are comparable to Assassins Creed Black Flag, at least for the details of the character models, the water in sea battles and the vegetation. Vegetation looks even better in RC imo and it still runs smooth on highest settings on my i7 3770k / geforce 670gtx.
Dying Light is a really broken game compared to Raven's Cry. Also the devs opened a sticky thread on the Steam community hub page were you can report bugs.
And the reviews just kill the game because it was delayed several times and some people are still butt hurt because of the delay. It had some minor bugs at the time of the release most stuff was already fixed within the hour, which cant be said about Techland. I tested it 4 hours after release, because I was finishing Fahrenheit (great game btw :P) and played it for ~70 mins without any crash, freeze or lag spike. Also the lip sync seems okay to me when you play it with English language. The only stupid thing is that they obviously weren't done yet with voice recording for all the characters, so it is a mix of spoken/text dialogs.
Before the game released the devs asked the community about DRM, most people answered with f*#k activation limits and registration, so they listened to the community and removed the activation limits and made the registration with the serial key optional. The serial key is mainly to verify that you bought the game and to receive special support for the product afaik. So the third party DRM that is listed on the steam page ONLY applies if you register your game with the serial key.
they explained it few times, not only once. it always was just like W2 and i think that only Topware game that was forced to register was TW2 where registration was not any outside software, but ingame. other games i know used launcher where you could choose prestart options and registration was offered there. beside TW2 where i had to, i doubt i ever bothered to register one of their games.
and you somehow know how it was originally intended? that would be a good one. there was little to know about game and yet you somehow know how DRM is supposed to work there?