The moment many have been waiting for, Feral Interactive have just announced that Rise of the Tomb Raider for Linux will release tomorrow, April 19th. As a reminder, this title will be using Vulkan.
I honestly haven't felt this hyped up for quite some time! April is turning out to be a damn fun month for Linux gaming.
Here's what Feral sent along for the official system requirements:
Minimum
OS: Ubuntu 17.10
Processor: Intel Core i3-4130T or AMD equivalent
Memory: 8 GB RAM
Graphics: 2GB AMD R9 285 (GCN 3rd Gen and above), 2GB Nvidia GTX 680 or better
Storage: 28 GB available space
Recommended
OS: Ubuntu 17.10
Processor: Intel Core i7-3770K
Memory: 12 GB RAM
Graphics: Nvidia GTX 980Ti
Storage: 28 GB available space
For NVIDIA GPU users, you will need the latest 396.18 beta driver at a minimum. For AMD GPU users, you will need Mesa 17.3.5, although if you're on Vega you will need Mesa 18.0 or later. AMD GCN 1st and 2nd generation graphics cards are not supported, Intel GPUs are also not supported.
Also, it requires an SSE2 capable processor.
We shall have a review out tomorrow at release and likely a livestream, so do ensure you're following us on Twitch.
If you wish to pick it up now, you can do so on the Humble Store, Feral Store or Steam directly. If you're worried about it not counting for Linux, Feral themselves have said publicly they're happy for people to buy games when they've announced them.
Quoting: GuestLast time I ran a game (probably SoM) from Feral it worked well with an older driver than "needed", maybe they just want to be sure.Quoting: linux_gamerI will call it a success if I will be able to see the loading screen with my setup.
Probably I will need to upgrade my driver first.
Shame that it looks like we'll be requiring a beta driver to play it :-\
Quoting: GuestI agree SteamPlay is bad for Feral. But it's good for new users coming from Windows, they don't have to buy all their games again. Anyway, I would like to see an option to buy an optional separated Linux-only version to show my interest in Linux games as well as dedication to the platform and to make sure I will 100% support the Linux publisher/developer.
For Feral games, you always can buy at their store, not matter what you own somewhere else.
I got my key in humble monthly in october. I have not generated or claimed the steam key yet so I've got no idea how it is counted.
Quoting: Comandante ÑoñardoFeral, if You take your self seriously
What a bad way to address people.
Quoting: ageres1. Baba Yaga is a story DLC available in-game. It's ok, but doesn't include actual Baba Yaga, so I was disappointed. I suspect it was cut from the base game and sold separately.
So it actually adds stuff into the middle of the game? Damn, that means I want it, if only to potentially get the "full experience", story-wise.
Quoting: ageresBut the story is still written by Rhianna Pratchet and it's even worse than in TR 2013.
When I saw her name in the credits for Tomb Raider 2013, I was a bit shocked. Considering who her father was, I expected her to write, well, a better story.
The story of Tomb Raider 2013 had me constantly being annoyed at Lara for not getting the bloody obvious. And for nor killing Mathias quickly with her bow out of stealth, on any of the three dozens of times she would have been perfectly able to. Most of the characters in the game felt flat as cardboard, too.
Quoting: KetilDon't think I will manage to get everything to 100% in TR 2013 first.
I ended the game with 88% done. I then went back and collected a few easy GPS caches, killing a few deer. I must be at like 89% now. But I'm not going to go back and do 100%.
I mean, I do have an addictive personality, and getting the numbers up does appeal to me. I put 150 hours in Dragon Age: Inquisition and 105 hours into Mass Effect: Andromeda because of that. But there I at least got story-bits and stuff out of it (as watered down as it was). And I still hated myself for doing it. As satisfying as seeing the numbers go up is, and as okay a gameplay loop it is, Tomb Raider just didn't make me care enough about the world and the characters.
Quoting: Comandante ÑoñardoOn other topic:You seem quite sure of this. But how much less appealing would it be for a gamer to switch to Linux from Windows if they had to buy again all of their Linux-supporting AAA games ported by companies like Aspyr and Feral, especially if the Linux ports were more expensive? And if it's not relatively painless for them to switch, how likely is it that they'd be here to buy the next game that gets ported?
Feral, if You take your self seriously and if You really have the publishing rights of these games for Linux and Mac, GET RID of STEAMPLAY..
Linux and Mac versions of Windows games must have a different store page and a different price when the Linux/Mac publisher is different than the windows publisher.
Would these roadblocks hurt the porters' sales less than what they would win by possibly getting a few Linux-using cheapskates to ignore a key reseller or something? Assuming some of those people wouldn't just buy the much cheaper Windows key anyway and dual boot to play it.
It's in any porting company's best interests to make sure their target platform is attractive to customers, and things like Steamplay might actually be useful here. Every new Linux gamer is a potential customer.
I feel like I want to buy a new card. But my brain says no... but... Arghhhh, dammit !
Quoting: tuubiBut how much less appealing would it be for a gamer to switch to Linux from Windows if they had to buy again all of their Linux-supporting AAA games ported by companies like Aspyr and Feral, especially if the Linux ports were more expensive?Very this, and if you want to support the porting company buy from their store! It's even more relevant if you live in a country that has regional discounts like mine (Russia). The price here is usually 60-80% lower than the base one (in US dollars). It's higher for the AAA titles but low enough to justify a purchase. Nevertheless, I bought from the Feral Store because these big and nice titles only get ported once in a few months and I wholeheartedly support the Feral's work. It's absolutely essential for promoting Linux and FOSS despite the games themselves being proprietary. The price was pretty high, about 2 days wage for me, but you know what? That was the best money spent in a while. And I'm considering doing the same for LiS because buying it for mere $7 (of which Steam gets 30% and the original developer gets a cut) is just wrong.
If you don't have starving children and family to feed, at least consider paying to Feral directly, they deserve each and every penny. And you also invest in the Linux gaming future.
Last edited by rkfg on 18 April 2018 at 9:26 pm UTC
QuoteMinimumDamn, I seriously need to upgrade my PC or at least graphic card & RAM.
OS: Ubuntu 17.10
Processor: Intel Core i3-4130T or AMD equivalent
Memory: 8 GB RAM
Graphics: 2GB AMD R9 285 (GCN 3rd Gen and above), 2GB Nvidia GTX 680 or better
Storage: 28 GB available space
Recommended
OS: Ubuntu 17.10
Processor: Intel Core i7-3770K
Memory: 12 GB RAM <<<<<<<
Graphics: Nvidia GTX 980Ti
Storage: 28 GB available space
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