A developer has posted on the Gauntlet Steam forums about Gauntlet: Slayer Edition, a free upgrade to Gauntlet. In the same post the developer noted that the SteamOS version has now been cancelled due to limited resources.
You can read the full post here.
So, that's that then, no Gauntlet for the penguin crowd it seems. I've done a quick scan of the Steam forums and it seems some people did pre-purchase the game due to the earlier promise of a Linux port. You might already be familiar with my attitude towards pre-orders and pre-purchases but I'll give you a small reminder: DON'T FRICKING DO IT.
This should be a good example of what could happen if you do not follow the mantra "don't buy before it's out". Hopefully the folks who bought early can get the game refunded.
QuoteSince all our focus has been needed on this free upgrade for PC, regretfully, the SteamOS version of the game has been cancelled. We hoped to have had that version ready by the time Valve had officially launched it later this year, but together with WBIE, it was decided that our limited resources were better dedicated to making the PC version the best it possibly could be. In our judgment that’s both what you PC players deserve, and what the PS4 version needs for the August release. We’re hoping that instead, you will enjoy the updates coming next month in Gauntlet: Slayer Edition as much as we do ourselves!
You can read the full post here.
So, that's that then, no Gauntlet for the penguin crowd it seems. I've done a quick scan of the Steam forums and it seems some people did pre-purchase the game due to the earlier promise of a Linux port. You might already be familiar with my attitude towards pre-orders and pre-purchases but I'll give you a small reminder: DON'T FRICKING DO IT.
This should be a good example of what could happen if you do not follow the mantra "don't buy before it's out". Hopefully the folks who bought early can get the game refunded.
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Quoting: GuestQuoting: HonorEDnlKThey just love to do this, I hate specifying that I'm american but not from the US, that's so annoying! Europeans and Asians don't have to do this..I'm the same, I hate specifying that I am English, and not European. The whole world seems to forget Europe is simply a collection of states, not a nation.
(sorry for off topic)
That's like saying you're Chinese but not Asian. Europe and Asia are continents, US is not a continent so you can't relate to that as an Englishman.
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Removed from my wishlist.
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You guys are being brats. The game will come eventually maybe not on schedule for the SteamOS release but I wouldn't be so sure it's cancelled altogether, just wait and see. Pretty much never say never kinda situation, if they showed interest in SteamOS enough to say they're making a port I think that's a very good start.
Also I loved the original Gauntlet and when this game will be ready for SteamOS I'll buy it then. :) I mean what about games like Divinity Original Sin, Giana Sisters, Darksiders 1 and 2, Homefront, Saint's Row, etc. that have a Linux port promised for a while now and still haven't shown up? When they come out are you going to refuse to buy them because the developer pretty much broke some arbitrary promise of a schedule? That's ridiculous the developers aren't God they can't just make things happen, especially these smaller development teams of a few people. If they have interest I guarantee you when the opportunity arises to make a SteamOS version they will.
Also I loved the original Gauntlet and when this game will be ready for SteamOS I'll buy it then. :) I mean what about games like Divinity Original Sin, Giana Sisters, Darksiders 1 and 2, Homefront, Saint's Row, etc. that have a Linux port promised for a while now and still haven't shown up? When they come out are you going to refuse to buy them because the developer pretty much broke some arbitrary promise of a schedule? That's ridiculous the developers aren't God they can't just make things happen, especially these smaller development teams of a few people. If they have interest I guarantee you when the opportunity arises to make a SteamOS version they will.
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Not interested in this game.
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Quoting: Linux tayshadyYou guys are being brats. The game will come eventually maybe not on schedule for the SteamOS release but I wouldn't be so sure it's cancelled altogether, just wait and see. Pretty much never say never kinda situation, if they showed interest in SteamOS enough to say they're making a port I think that's a very good start.The difference, my friend, is that these devs cancelled the port. Read the article. Unless they decide to change their minds it is not coming. You could say "the game will come eventually" about any other game and that info would be about as reliable.
Also I loved the original Gauntlet and when this game will be ready for SteamOS I'll buy it then. :) I mean what about games like Divinity Original Sin, Giana Sisters, Darksiders 1 and 2, Homefront, Saint's Row, etc. that have a Linux port promised for a while now and still haven't shown up? When they come out are you going to refuse to buy them because the developer pretty much broke some arbitrary promise of a schedule? That's ridiculous the developers aren't God they can't just make things happen, especially these smaller development teams of a few people. If they have interest I guarantee you when the opportunity arises to make a SteamOS version they will.
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I'm hoping that the poor folks who pre-ordered are going to be able to claim a refund under the new policy.
That being said, I wonder what has more of a consumer impact, purchasing a game and getting it refunded or not purchasing it at all.
That being said, I wonder what has more of a consumer impact, purchasing a game and getting it refunded or not purchasing it at all.
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This is a great example of why you don't buy games until they're actually playable on Linux.
This is one I was planning to buy, reviews be damned. Oh well.
This is one I was planning to buy, reviews be damned. Oh well.
1 Likes, Who?
Well that's £18 I can spend on something else then.
Good job Gauntlet developers. /sarcasm
Good job Gauntlet developers. /sarcasm
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Quoting: Linux tayshadyYou guys are being brats. The game will come eventually maybe not on schedule for the SteamOS release but I wouldn't be so sure it's cancelled altogether, just wait and see. Pretty much never say never kinda situation, if they showed interest in SteamOS enough to say they're making a port I think that's a very good start.
Also I loved the original Gauntlet and when this game will be ready for SteamOS I'll buy it then. :) I mean what about games like Divinity Original Sin, Giana Sisters, Darksiders 1 and 2, Homefront, Saint's Row, etc. that have a Linux port promised for a while now and still haven't shown up? When they come out are you going to refuse to buy them because the developer pretty much broke some arbitrary promise of a schedule? That's ridiculous the developers aren't God they can't just make things happen, especially these smaller development teams of a few people. If they have interest I guarantee you when the opportunity arises to make a SteamOS version they will.
The developers said themselves that it was cancelled. And promises of a schedule should be adhered to if they want to be taken seriously with their promises.
I would rather support the developers who are actually releasing on Linux and are good at communicating with their userbase.
It's been a year since any news on Darksiders, so it seems like the effort is dead. I believe the second homefront was the one coming to Linux, and it hasn't released yet.
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I understand the uncertainty people have when approaching Linux.
The lack of proper support creates a huge difference that I see on my system running both Win 7 and Ubuntu. Some of the titles I play are considerably behind in performance on Linux. Some are the same, but for this to be a market worth entering vendors need to cooperate better.
The same performance on all platforms is the goal.
I also forgot to mention, that a lot of unfinished, unpolished, buggy stuff is constantly released because people want to "innovate". There's not much enjoyable about innovation if ordinary consumers are left with bugged systems with no foreseeable patches.
My system is a perfect example, where I can't even launch LibreOffice without crashing my entire session (I already reported an Xorg bug, let's see how long will it take them to fix it. It's taking already more than 6 months.) Then there's the microphone not working and I'm not even going to continue.
So much for people entering Linux.
Linus said, that it bothers him, that Linux is doing great as a server platform but not as a desktop, which was his intent. We know the solution to this problem. Now to get to work, so consumers get working, not broken systems.
Last edited by Inoki on 24 July 2015 at 5:27 pm UTC
The lack of proper support creates a huge difference that I see on my system running both Win 7 and Ubuntu. Some of the titles I play are considerably behind in performance on Linux. Some are the same, but for this to be a market worth entering vendors need to cooperate better.
The same performance on all platforms is the goal.
I also forgot to mention, that a lot of unfinished, unpolished, buggy stuff is constantly released because people want to "innovate". There's not much enjoyable about innovation if ordinary consumers are left with bugged systems with no foreseeable patches.
My system is a perfect example, where I can't even launch LibreOffice without crashing my entire session (I already reported an Xorg bug, let's see how long will it take them to fix it. It's taking already more than 6 months.) Then there's the microphone not working and I'm not even going to continue.
So much for people entering Linux.
Linus said, that it bothers him, that Linux is doing great as a server platform but not as a desktop, which was his intent. We know the solution to this problem. Now to get to work, so consumers get working, not broken systems.
Last edited by Inoki on 24 July 2015 at 5:27 pm UTC
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Quoting: InokiMy system is a perfect example, where I can't even launch LibreOffice without crashing my entire session (I already reported an Xorg bug, let's see how long will it take them to fix it. It's taking already more than 6 months.) Then there's the microphone not working and I'm not even going to continue.
Just curiosity, what is your system's configuration and what version of Ubuntu do you use?
I have 4 computers (Dualcore E8400 3.0ghz with Nvidia GT-240, DELL Inspiron N5110 with Radeon HD-6470m, DualCore G2030 with NVidia GTX-650 and I7-2600 with NVidia GTX-750ti) all running Ubuntu and never had that much problems.
Your problems with LibreOffice are quite unusual. It makes me wonder...
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Quoting: InokiThe lack of proper support creates a huge difference that I see on my system running both Win 7 and Ubuntu. Some of the titles I play are considerably behind in performance on Linux. Some are the same, but for this to be a market worth entering vendors need to cooperate better.Without examples this argument is worthless.
Quoting: InokiI also forgot to mention, that a lot of unfinished, unpolished, buggy stuff is constantly released because ponies want to "innovate". There's not much enjoyable about innovation if ordinary consumers are left with bugged systems with no foreseeable patches.The same thing happen on Windows, games are released early because the developers are out of money to continue working on it. I remember from the days when I was playing on Windows that The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion was a total disaster on release, practically unplayable.
Quoting: InokiMy system is a perfect example, where I can't even launch LibreOffice without crashing my entire session (I already reported an Xorg bug, let's see how long will it take them to fix it. It's taking already more than 6 months.) Then there's the microphone not working and I'm not even going to continue.At work I've got the reverse of this one, Microsoft Word crashing whenever I opened it and it was all because of a update of Microsoft Lync, took me (after-)hours to figure this out and fix it. I've got Excel macros not working anymore for no apparent reasons. I've got Cisco Anyconnect VPN that I had to restart entirely if I miss my password one time because it says that all subsequent password are incorrect (even if they are correct). I've got the fucking Windows Update that bother me every four hour. And with only five/six programs running and not consuming a quarter of the RAM I have (I've got 32GB) the whole system become slow or hang sometimes without apparent reasons.
And you complain about your microphone, it probably work without problems on Windows because it was designed for it. Try to make a Playstation 3 controller work on Windows and you'll see that's not easy (and you'll probably end up with a virus on your system).
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Quoting: NyamiouWithout examples this argument is worthless.
There is no such thing as a worthless argument if a user is talking from experience. On a side note, I am not to be confused for a Windows fan. I've been running Linux since 2010, mostly Ubuntu and derivatives, but I've tried others as well.
For some reason often when I comment on something on a site focused on Linux and I provide honest feedback I get this impression of hostility, that people often seem ignorant of others' frustration just because something works for them. Well, good for you, bad for me, but it's true that Linux has a lot of issues people should admit.
For your convenience I will name L4D2, a fairly old game on my laptop, which is a Lenovo G50-45, full specs below:
System: Host: Lenovo-G50-45 Kernel: 3.19.0-23-generic x86_64 (64 bit)
Desktop: Xfce 4.12.0 Distro: Ubuntu 15.04 vivid
Machine: System: LENOVO product: 80E3 v: Lenovo G50-45
Mobo: LENOVO model: Lancer 5B2 v: 31900058 STD
Bios: LENOVO v: A2CN36WW(V2.04) date: 04/30/2015
CPU: Quad core AMD A6-6310 APU with AMD Radeon R4 Graphics (-MCP-) cache: 8192 KB
clock speeds: max: 1800 MHz 1: 1200 MHz 2: 1200 MHz 3: 1400 MHz
4: 1000 MHz
Graphics: Card-1: Advanced Micro Devices [AMD/ATI] Mullins [Radeon R4/R5 Graphics]
Card-2: Advanced Micro Devices [AMD/ATI] Sun LE [Radeon HD 8550M / R5 M230]
Display Server: X.Org 1.17.1 drivers: ati,radeon (unloaded: fbdev,vesa)
Resolution: [email protected]
GLX Renderer: Gallium 0.4 on AMD MULLINS
GLX Version: 3.0 Mesa 10.5.2
Audio: Card-1 Advanced Micro Devices [AMD] FCH Azalia Controller
driver: snd_hda_intel
Card-2 Advanced Micro Devices [AMD/ATI] Kabini HDMI/DP Audio
driver: snd_hda_intel
Sound: Advanced Linux Sound Architecture v: k3.19.0-23-generic
Network: Card-1: Qualcomm Atheros QCA9565 / AR9565 Wireless Network Adapter
driver: ath9k
Card-2: Realtek RTL8111/8168/8411 PCI Express Gigabit Ethernet Controller
driver: r8169
Card-3: Atheros
IF: null-if-id state: N/A speed: N/A duplex: N/A mac: N/A
Drives: HDD Total Size: 1000.2GB (9.3% used)
ID-1: /dev/sda model: ST1000LM014 size: 1000.2GB
With this configuration on Windows I can run the game nicely on around 80 FPS, zero lag, full details.
On Linux I have to lower settings below medium and still can't get past 25 FPS on average with terrible lag spikes, frame drops to 1. I even use Xfce for lower resource usage.
This example has to suffice.
Note: I've tried proprietary drivers, they break my system.
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Quoting: HonorEDnlKWhat's with people and taking names for something that's more general and just shove it to something specific, that's what the people who say PC when they intend to say Windows are doing. And I rightfully hate that practice.Blame the Apple marketing juggernaut with their "I'm a Mac; and I'm a PC" commercials which drilled it into people's heads that PC = Windows. Still, you'd expect a software developer to know better.
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Quoting: InokiMy system is a perfect example, where I can't even launch LibreOffice without crashing my entire session (I already reported an Xorg bug, let's see how long will it take them to fix it. It's taking already more than 6 months.) Then there's the microphone not working and I'm not even going to continue.I have to assume you're a paid shill for Microsoft engaging in the age old practice of astroturfing forums with FUD about Linux. I run Kubuntu and have not had a single issue with LibreOffice, and my microphone works perfectly. In fact, Kubuntu has been far more stable and user friendly than any version of Windows I've ever used. Whatever problems you're (supposedly) having with Linux are far from typical.
So much for people entering Linux.
Linus said, that it bothers him, that Linux is doing great as a server platform but not as a desktop, which was his intent. We know the solution to this problem. Now to get to work, so consumers get working, not broken systems.
Last edited by Mountain Man on 24 July 2015 at 9:42 pm UTC
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Quoting: Mountain ManI have to assume you're a paid shill for Microsoft engaging in the age old practice of astroturfing forums with FUD about Linux.
You're exactly the type of moronic zealot I've been talking about, ignorant as fuck.
It's pointless when the community consists of people like you.
People have serious issues but individuals like this take it they have to be involved in some kind of conspiracy against Linux, just because they state the obvious. You sir, are a very poor character.
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I think it's interesting that linux users say "don't preorder!" when really, preorder numbers may have had an impact on their decision to continue with the development.
Oh well, I played it on Windows it was actually pretty awesome (I love local coop) but I do hope that eventually (maybe if SteamOS hits it off) they'll decide to come back to a linux version. They had to have started at least some work on it...
Oh well, I played it on Windows it was actually pretty awesome (I love local coop) but I do hope that eventually (maybe if SteamOS hits it off) they'll decide to come back to a linux version. They had to have started at least some work on it...
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Quoting: KurremkarmerrukI think it's interesting that linux users say "don't preorder!" when really, preorder numbers may have had an impact on their decision to continue with the development.The games industry has shown that it is not to be trusted when it comes to pre-orders. Feel free to continue doing that silly thing but don't cry about it when devs don't ship and quality is poor.
Oh well, I played it on Windows it was actually pretty awesome (I love local coop) but I do hope that eventually (maybe if SteamOS hits it off) they'll decide to come back to a linux version. They had to have started at least some work on it...
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Quoting: ChristopherWereThat being said, I wonder what has more of a consumer impact, purchasing a game and getting it refunded or not purchasing it at all.In the second case the devs see how much money they loose, so it is clear to me.
Quoting: InokiWith this configuration on Windows I can run the game nicely on around 80 FPS, zero lag, full details.Prop. driver give me comparable performance, too bad they dont work for you.
On Linux I have to lower settings below medium and still can't get past 25 FPS on average with terrible lag spikes, frame drops to 1. I even use Xfce for lower resource usage.
This example has to suffice.
Note: I've tried proprietary drivers, they break my system.
Last edited by linux_gamer on 24 July 2015 at 10:10 pm UTC
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Quoting: Mountain ManQuoting: HonorEDnlKWhat's with people and taking names for something that's more general and just shove it to something specific, that's what the people who say PC when they intend to say Windows are doing. And I rightfully hate that practice.Blame the Apple marketing juggernaut with their "I'm a Mac; and I'm a PC" commercials which drilled it into people's heads that PC = Windows. Still, you'd expect a software developer to know better.
Although it didn't help.. but doesn't it really derive from the 80s/early 90s.
You had games and on the boxes stickers which told 'you' what kind of machine it was for:
For Amiga
For Commodore 64
For Amstrad CPC
For IBM PC and compatibles...
...where it would then list requirements such as DOS 4.0, 640kb, supports Adlib, Roland, Soundblaster, etc.
As time went by most of the competitors died off and the IBM PC remained but the lingo on game boxes had become "For PC with Windows 95, etc"
Which version of DOS or Windows was always 2nd to It's for (IBM)-PC. I think the drill had already been implanted in most people's heads that PC=DOS/WINDOWS.
However I do agree and would prefer people to Say "Windows" rather than "PC.
Last edited by thelimeydragon on 24 July 2015 at 10:23 pm UTC
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