As a big Star Wars fan I approve of this. STAR WARS: DARK FORCES is now officially available and supported on Linux and is available from GOG.
It's probably using DOSBox or something like that, so it's not exactly native, but with old classics who cares.
About the game
The New Order of the Empire stretches its evil clutches across the galaxy, consuming planets with devastating results. Through many struggles, the Rebel Alliance has learned of a new Imperial battle station, the DEATH STAR, with enough power to destroy an entire planet.
The evil empire is secretly building a massive army to complete their arsenal of domination and render their reign of terror unstoppable. Kyle Katarn, a formal imperial stormtrooper must join the Rebel Alliance's covert operations division, and re-take the empire from the inside, one battle at a time.
Unlike many other Doom-based games, Dark Forces attempted a realistic approach: The missions followed a specific storyline, sometimes cut up by scenes to progress the narrative. Each mission had its own briefing and objective. The levels were designed to represent actual bases, mines, facilities, and other known places from the Star Wars universe, like Star Destroyer interiors, Jabba's ship, Coruscant, etc.
Fully interactive environments - morphing walls and floors, moving platforms, and conveyors, 'realistic' lighting and atmospheric effects.
Arm yourself with 10 different weapons to fight twenty various types of enemies, ranging from rank-and-file Stormtroopers to the vicious Kell Dragon.
Explore the virtual Star Wars universe up close and personal as you blast your through 14 exciting missions
Climb catwalks, look and shoot up and down, jump off ledges, wade through garbage.
Will you be picking it up? While I am a big Star Wars nerd, I personally won't. It's just too low-res for me to enjoy it now, or is that me being silly, is it really that much of a classic? Educate me!
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The main thing that turns me off about Dark Forces is its lack of a proper in-level saving system.
Dark Forces II was one of the games I grew up with, but it sadly does not even work in WINE. Jedi Outcast and Jedi Academy had their source code released a few years ago, which means that they run fine on Linux although as far as I am concerned they are far weaker than their predecessors in terms of ideas at the very least.
Still, it just might be worth giving the original another try at some point.
Dark Forces II was one of the games I grew up with, but it sadly does not even work in WINE. Jedi Outcast and Jedi Academy had their source code released a few years ago, which means that they run fine on Linux although as far as I am concerned they are far weaker than their predecessors in terms of ideas at the very least.
Still, it just might be worth giving the original another try at some point.
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Already own it on Steam...now just waiting for Steam to carry on Linux (note I bought the complete Jedi Knight series a while back before I planned on gaming on Linux).
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Wait, isn't it a dos game? You can run almost any of those on dosbox. (And the one from gog.com is most likely using dosbox.)
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Quoting: HamishThe main thing that turns me off about Dark Forces is its lack of a proper in-level saving system.
Dark Forces II was one of the games I grew up with, but it sadly does not even work in WINE.
Hmm, according to WINE's AppDB Dark Forces II should work ok.
https://appdb.winehq.org/objectManager.php?sClass=application&iId=122
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HOLY HELL finally Star Wars on Linux!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
This just made my year :D :D :D
It's not THAT big of a game, BUT STILL.... FINALLY WE HAVE STAR WARS ON LINUX!!!!
Hoping KOTOR will be making a splash soon too ^_^
This just made my year :D :D :D
It's not THAT big of a game, BUT STILL.... FINALLY WE HAVE STAR WARS ON LINUX!!!!
Hoping KOTOR will be making a splash soon too ^_^
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Quoting: GuestGOG’s DOSBox "ports" are terrible from what I have seen so I avoid them now.Care to elaborate on that point?
I have not tried them extensively, but Duke Nukem 3D, Blake Stone, and Rise of the Triad all ran just about perfectly for me when I used them.
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stan, did you send a full bug report to them?
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Also, this means there's now an easy DRM-free source for Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords, in case people want to get it to help with xoreos. *hinthint* :P
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Quoting: HamishDark Forces II was one of the games I grew up with, but it sadly does not even work in WINE.
Hey Hamish!
For me that seems not really correct at the moment: I've got the full game working under WINE: http://www.dailymotion.com/playlist/x3k5cr_Throgh_jedi-knight-spiele-und-unterhaltung/1#video=x2dirua :D
EDIT: Just to mention also got mods like "Jedi Knight Enhanced" working with WINE ... http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x2dxjzj_jedi-knight-04-unterwegs-in-abwasserkanalen_videogames
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Quoting: DrMcCoyAlso, this means there's now an easy DRM-free source for Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords, in case people want to get it to help with xoreos. *hinthint* :P
*hinthint* indeed! Neverwinter Nights (I clicked on the link, you sneaky devil) has had a native Linux client since 2003(!), and a client that still works (try that with a game written for WinXP without some serious tweaking under Win7 or (God help us) Win8.)
Purchasing NWN Diamond from GOG and installing the Linux client is much harder than installing it from the DVD (I've done both). It would be terrific if GOG would make the Linux-client NWN available, either as the usual tar.gz file or as a .deb (Red Hat derivative users can use alias the same way Debian derivative users do). It would make one of the very first (if not the first) commercial games to support Linux easily installable by we (superior OS :D ) Linux users.
Also, any DOS game (for Windows, OSX, or Linux) sold by GOG does use DOSBox...
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