Not much being said in public about the Arma 3 Linux port, but it seems it is progressing and could become a reality.
If you remember, it was only started as an experiment to see how it would perform with an external porter (Virtual Programming).
The developer replied to a user on twitter to say they have been testing it:
@d10sfan Hi. We've been testing the experimental ports as Beta in-house and it's looking promising. More details coming up!
— Arma 3 (@Arma3official) August 3, 2015
I will be very interested to see how it performs, and can't wait to give it a test run. It will be great to see the developer share some more details soon.
About the game (Official)
Experience true combat gameplay in a massive military sandbox. Deploying a wide variety of single- and multiplayer content, over 20 vehicles and 40 weapons, and limitless opportunities for content creation, this is the PC’s premier military game. Authentic, diverse, open - Arma 3 sends you to war.
Some you may have missed, popular articles from the last month:
Quoting: dubigrasuThat's exactly my point! Saying that something is "promising" sounds good without actually telling us anything. It's PR fluff and nothing more.Quoting: Mountain ManLike I said, it was PR fluff that doesn't actually tell us anything.No, it could mean a lot of things, from: "we managed to start and play the game for 5 minutes before it crashed" to "the port is working really good but we still have some issues to resolve ".
Other that " promising" we know too little to go "Likely" or "Unlikely".
That said, "promising" is not a word I would expect someone to use to describe your latter scenario.
Last edited by Mountain Man on 4 August 2015 at 10:01 am UTC
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Quoting: Mountain ManFrankly my dear, I don't give a fuck about what you would use or expect.Quoting: dubigrasuThat's exactly my point! Saying that something is "promising" sounds good without actually telling us anything. It's PR fluff and nothing more.Quoting: Mountain ManLike I said, it was PR fluff that doesn't actually tell us anything.No, it could mean a lot of things, from: "we managed to start and play the game for 5 minutes before it crashed" to "the port is working really good but we still have some issues to resolve ".
Other that " promising" we know too little to go "Likely" or "Unlikely".
That said, "promising" is not a word I would expect someone to use to describe your latter scenario.
Last edited by dubigrasu on 4 August 2015 at 10:18 am UTC
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Quoting: dubigrasuOh, I get it, this is that thing where someone is too stubborn to admit that they've fallen behind in a debate, so they suddenly claim to no longer care about a topic that they were actively discussing. To quote the fox, "Those grapes are probably sour anyway."Quoting: Mountain ManFrankly my dear, I don't give a fuck about what you would use or expect.Quoting: dubigrasuThat's exactly my point! Saying that something is "promising" sounds good without actually telling us anything. It's PR fluff and nothing more.Quoting: Mountain ManLike I said, it was PR fluff that doesn't actually tell us anything.No, it could mean a lot of things, from: "we managed to start and play the game for 5 minutes before it crashed" to "the port is working really good but we still have some issues to resolve ".
Other that " promising" we know too little to go "Likely" or "Unlikely".
That said, "promising" is not a word I would expect someone to use to describe your latter scenario.
Well played, sir, well played.
Last edited by Mountain Man on 4 August 2015 at 12:23 pm UTC
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No, is just that you see the glass as half empty and I see it half full, so no point in continuing.
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I bought Arma 3 back when it released, but I think I've only played a couple hours of it. Maybe this'll actually get me to play it.
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