Every article tag can be clicked to get a list of all articles in that category. Every article tag also has an RSS feed! You can customize an RSS feed too!
We do often include affiliate links to earn us some pennies. See more here.
tagline-image
The Game Developers Conference (GDC) isn't too far away now, and a few more sessions are starting to appear. One in particular caught the interesting of a reader who sent it in, and now it's exciting me too.

The title of a particular talk from AMD is "D3D12 & Vulkan: Lessons Learned", now that's interesting by itself, but in the description they state this:
QuoteThe presentation will include useful insights gained while developing the first wave of Vulkan & DirectX®12 titles.

Either AMD have been working with a developer behind the scenes on a new game using Vulkan, or someone has been porting a title or two over to it ready for sometime this year. Either of those would be exciting, and it's really great that AMD is doing a talk on it. I hope Nvidia and Intel are also planning to get word out about what they have been doing for Vulkan some more too, but it's especially good to see AMD talking it up again.

If AMD's Vulkan driver works as good or better than Nvidia's then we will finally have more of a choice of who to go with, not that I'm going to be moving away from my Nvidia 980ti any time soon though. Competition is good and all that.

GDC starts on March 14th and runs until the the 18th, so it's not all that long until we get more details. We imagine more details will leak out before it too.

I'm starting to think Vulkan will be released alongside GDC (or very close to it) to enable developers to talk more openly about it like this.

Also, a gentle reminder, it's Vulkan, not Vulcan.

Thanks for the info Kallestofeles. Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
0 Likes
About the author -
author picture
I am the owner of GamingOnLinux. After discovering Linux back in the days of Mandrake in 2003, I constantly checked on the progress of Linux until Ubuntu appeared on the scene and it helped me to really love it. You can reach me easily by emailing GamingOnLinux directly.
See more from me
The comments on this article are closed.
21 comments
Page: 1/2»
  Go to:

tuubi Jan 11, 2016
View PC info
  • Supporter Plus
It would be weird if they hadn't been working with game developers on Vulkan backends. They wouldn't be stupid enough to do their first Vulkan driver releases without any testing on real game engines, right? I'm sure NVidia and even Intel are doing the exact same thing. Also, I'd bet these games are all very recent or upcoming big budget titles.
linux_gamer Jan 11, 2016
Quoting: TheBossAlso, a gentle reminder, it's Vulkan, not Vulcan.
First violator will be shot! ;)
Orkultus Jan 11, 2016
Hopefully the reason why amd haven't done anything amazing with their proprietary drivers, is because they are to busy putting the good performance code into vulkan.
ljrk Jan 11, 2016
And he even seems to be a Linux guy :-)

https://twitter.com/niv_anteru
ljrk Jan 11, 2016
Ofcourse, on has to. but in his twitter history he has some negative views on windows.h for example.
He seems to be a straight-forward pro-portability guy. Which I like
megasthenes Jan 11, 2016
what might those mysterious games be?
I'm betting TW3. Obviously they've been working in-house porting it without giving any further information on progress etc.
Also they've been saying that they will push out additional content to TW3 in the year 2016 which brought the game back to the possible port radar for me after most users (especially on steam) already were confident that they'll solely be working on cyberpunk after the release of Blood & Wine. That possibly isn't true..

Then there was the mysterious "Enhanced Edition" failure for some sellers, which they outright denied without saying that there's no such thing being made - and furthermore saying that "that's some error we (CDPR) will be looking into". The last thing kinda got me as that reads like someone might have violated a NDA...
Then the galaxy client is marked as "in progress" and I don't think that they're working on that without planning at least some kind of sale for the client release.

Exciting times.
Creak Jan 11, 2016
Quoting: megastheneswhat might those mysterious games be?
I'd say games based on Valve's Source engine. Maybe the first game to be updated will be Dota 2 (considering it's Valve's most played game.
megasthenes Jan 11, 2016
Quoting: Creak
Quoting: megastheneswhat might those mysterious games be?
I'd say games based on Valve's Source engine. Maybe the first game to be updated will be Dota 2 (considering it's Valve's most played game.

To be honest I'd be heavily underwhelmed but yes - you're probably right.
chuzzle44 Jan 11, 2016
Quoting: Creak
Quoting: megastheneswhat might those mysterious games be?
I'd say games based on Valve's Source engine. Maybe the first game to be updated will be Dota 2 (considering it's Valve's most played game.

There have been rumors going around about Left 4 dead 3.
neowiz73 Jan 12, 2016
no worries about the FOSS drivers, those will be released by the Khronos Group once Vulkan is officially released. So it should be easy porting for the rest of Linux.

So most likely the usual upstream will happen. Ubuntu and based distros may get it sooner, through their graphics-drivers ppa. Unless they have plans to push these drivers to the official repos sooner and try to get them available by the time 16.04 goes stable. I kind of doubt it though, most likely it will be the 16.10 release.

At least we should consider these newer ports due to come out in March/April for possible first contenders to show off the new drivers. all I know is Linux will be crazy awesome going forward on this. Not just for gaming but overall general performance and battery life on Laptops, plus this will help the adoption of Wayland and Mir that much better.

I'm really looking forward to seeing this available through the Unreal Engine and we see Ark adopt this very soon as well.


Last edited by neowiz73 on 12 January 2016 at 1:02 am UTC
Quoting: neowiz73no worries about the FOSS drivers, those will be released by the Khronos Group once Vulkan is officially released. So it should be easy porting for the rest of Linux.

So most likely the usual upstream will happen. Ubuntu and based distros may get it sooner, through their graphics-drivers ppa. Unless they have plans to push these drivers to the official repos sooner and try to get them available by the time 16.04 goes stable. I kind of doubt it though, most likely it will be the 16.10 release.

At least we should consider these newer ports due to come out in March/April for possible first contenders to show off the new drivers. all I know is Linux will be crazy awesome going forward on this. Not just for gaming but overall general performance and battery life on Laptops, plus this will help the adoption of Wayland and Mir that much better.

I'm really looking forward to seeing this available through the Unreal Engine and we see Ark adopt this very soon as well.

Khronos makes drivers? I thought they were strictly into API development and licensing them out. As far as I know the only relation Khronos has with FOSS drivers is that they upheld SGI's decision to allow Mesa to develop OpenGL drivers without purchasing a license.

Or that was my understanding from having skimmed Wiki articles and the such. I'm still very much wet behind the ears.
Guest Jan 12, 2016
cant we just get the driver out even if there are no games yet.. you know, just something. Its all 'next month' and its been like that for 12months.
neowiz73 Jan 12, 2016
Quoting: MadeanaccounttocommentKhronos makes drivers? I thought they were strictly into API development and licensing them out. As far as I know the only relation Khronos has with FOSS drivers is that they upheld SGI's decision to allow Mesa to develop OpenGL drivers without purchasing a license.

Or that was my understanding from having skimmed Wiki articles and the such. I'm still very much wet behind the ears.

according to the first couple of videos I've seen on the initial presentations and even the one from SIGGRAPH last august they have mentioned that the software side drivers which are the open sourced drivers will be kept and provided by the Khronos Group. these are the general case drivers that allow software devs to enable most graphical acceleration without any proprietary bits.
this means that programs and most basic games, GUIs, DEs won't need proprietary drivers for acceleration.
Then there is the proprietary bits which will be held with their parent companies, which will be an additional hardware driver to be installed later. which is what Nvidia will provide. I'm not aware if AMD will have proprietary bits. But there is also a hardware driver that has to be installed separate from the software driver.
The software driver will be the common used section for all software running with Vulkan.
SPIR-V is the main component to the software driver, which is also being designed to be backward compatible to OpenGL as well. which should give easier setup for OpenGL programs.


Last edited by neowiz73 on 12 January 2016 at 9:36 am UTC
MayeulC Jan 12, 2016
Quoting: GuestI expect NVIDIA to help with the open source NVIDIA driver for Vulkan support, since supporting Vulkan in drivers is supposed to be pretty trivial, much more-so than with OpenGL.

Well, this would require them to release their signed firmwares, which I don't think will happen anytime soon.
blackout24 Jan 12, 2016
Quoting: MyeulC
Quoting: GuestI expect NVIDIA to help with the open source NVIDIA driver for Vulkan support, since supporting Vulkan in drivers is supposed to be pretty trivial, much more-so than with OpenGL.

Well, this would require them to release their signed firmwares, which I don't think will happen anytime soon.

The rendering API has aboslutely nothing to do with NVIDIAs signed firmwares.
sub Jan 12, 2016
Quoting: GuestBest we can hope for is that Valve release the intel drivers they modified for testing Vulkan.

That's what Valve promised.

Page 18:
http://media.steampowered.com/apps/valve/2015/Pierre-Loup_Griffais_and_John_McDonald_Vulkan.pdf
neowiz73 Jan 12, 2016
I tried to find the original test video footage of Vulkan where I heard them mention the software drivers. but it was from early 2014 and seems impossible to find now. But from more recent videos/documents it would seem like it's referred to as just APIs and binaries.
Nevertheless, Nvidia has already been adding some vulkan libs into their latest drivers. it's going to be awesome to see this come to fruition.
sub Jan 12, 2016
Quoting: Guest
Quoting: sub
Quoting: GuestBest we can hope for is that Valve release the intel drivers they modified for testing Vulkan.

That's what Valve promised.

Page 18:
http://media.steampowered.com/apps/valve/2015/Pierre-Loup_Griffais_and_John_McDonald_Vulkan.pdf

A "promise" back then means nothing until it's actually released.

Right, in that regard you cannot trust anyone promising anything. :D
wojtek88 Jan 12, 2016
Quoting: Guestwords are cheap, let's wait until something is actually released.
Golden words
blackout24 Jan 12, 2016
Quoting: Guestnvidia will not help with FOSS drivers for Vulkan. Signed firmware is required to load drivers, regardless of rendering api, and nvidia will not release those.

Khronos might provide reference material, and possibly even some debug tools via one of their members (Valve & LunarG for example), but will not provide drivers themselves. Best we can hope for is that Valve release the intel drivers they modified for testing Vulkan.

That's nonsense. NVIDIA is working hard to get their firmware loading support in good shape so it can be upstreamed. The problem is that it's different for Tegra and desktop GPUs.

The Google Pixel C is running nouveau with the signed firmware for example.

https://plus.google.com/+AlexandreCourbot/posts/XfWEnf2xg8Q

Just read the comments by Alexandre Courbot.


Last edited by blackout24 on 12 January 2016 at 6:36 pm UTC
While you're here, please consider supporting GamingOnLinux on:

Reward Tiers: Patreon. Plain Donations: PayPal.

This ensures all of our main content remains totally free for everyone! Patreon supporters can also remove all adverts and sponsors! Supporting us helps bring good, fresh content. Without your continued support, we simply could not continue!

You can find even more ways to support us on this dedicated page any time. If you already are, thank you!
The comments on this article are closed.