DRM-free GOG fans rejoice, you can now join the space race as Egosoft have put X4: Foundations for Linux up.
Previously released on Steam, along with a little Beta period the latest space sim will take some time to learn, but it's a thoroughly interesting (and at times quite beautiful) experience. An incredibly detailed game in many ways, although I still often have to look things up as it can be pretty confusing.
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In X4, you can start your journey from a number of different gamestarts and as a number of different characters, each with their own role, set of relationships and different ships and technologies to start with. No matter how you start, you are always free to develop in any other direction. Focus on exploration, make money with illegal trading and theft, command large battle fleets or become the greatest entrepreneur ever. It's all up to you to decide.
Fly on over to GOG for your copy.
If you've been playing it, do tell us about your space adventures in the comments.
There isn't as much hand holding as some may want and I'm totally fine with that as I expected it from having played X3 a lot. It's actually one of the things I like about it. The UI etc. needs to be improved but if you have the patience you will be rewarded by trial/error and sometimes just a couple of brain cells will get you there. It does have bugs but saving often is a must anyway as you will have other surprises. That does not mean that I have encountered anything that have been game breaking yet (progress) and I have only had a couple of CTDs in 350+ hours.
I went into this knowing that the guys making it will support it for a long time, have great forums for bug reports and devs that care and interacts with the community. Small company so things takes time. There's already a lot of mods and there'll be a lot more as the time goes. It's kind of like the truck simulator games from SCS.
Lots of guides, YT videos, wiki stuff (also from egosoft themselves) to help you when you need it. I've had to look things up even though the tutorial showed me something 40 hours ago cause.... yeah you forget :P
It is as relaxing/stressful as you make it but you need to give it time. It's kind of like an MMO where no single part will win an award for best in class but where the overall feel is the big winner if you get hooked.
Last edited by Tiedemann on 6 June 2019 at 11:51 pm UTC
Anyway is this game OpenGL or Vulkan? kinda sick of developers attempting to do OpenGL correctly but failing horribly (Ark comes to mind)
Quoting: TheRiddickAnyway is this game OpenGL or Vulkan? kinda sick of developers attempting to do OpenGL correctly but failing horribly (Ark comes to mind)
Vulkan.
Quoting: Guest:D Now I can't unsee it...Quoting: liamdaweQuoting: CreakThat video thumbnail... :DSpace Phallus.
Damn, you both beat me to it.
Quoting: marcelomendesSad to say but I'm done with buying on GOG until they release Galaxy on Linux. Manual download and updates are things of the past. Yes, I know about lgogdownloader, and no, it isn't a replacement.I feel your pain. I still like buying games on GOG, but I'm not all-in. If it's a game that I think I'll be playing online with my friends a lot, I pick Steam because 1) I want to know if they're playing it and 2) I want updates to happen without me having to check for patches like the old days. And, with GOG, when there is a game update, I have to download the whole game! For those reasons, I only buy games on GOG that are either single-player or will be played on LAN instead of across the Internet.
Last edited by 14 on 7 June 2019 at 7:56 pm UTC
Of course I am also impatient for gog galaxy to be released on linux, I also know gog had difficulties recently, that they are a small team with small budget, and that they have their priorities. They put forward the openness of their galaxy client, the fact that it should work on any platform, therefore I guess linux client should come soon or later. I would not even be surprised if in a couple of year gog could not remain independant and will partner with valve. (which could be a good thing for linux).
Don't forget gog belongs to cdprojekt and that back in the days, they were some of the first linux supporters. When they released witcher 2 it did not get the way people wanted it, but noneless the effort should have been appreciated for what it was. Major RPG + DRM Free was quite original back in the days as every single other editor was advocating for always more DRM. So if you had linux support on top of that, you have a really original company that loves video games and their gamers probably even more than gamers themselves.
Now there are quite a few game on linux and on gog, and they are drmfree, I really don't get why people are so relentless against them. They offer everything an honest editor should offer to their customer : the full disposal of their purchase.
Peace :)
Last edited by Jahimself on 8 June 2019 at 4:24 am UTC
Although it says "DRM free" on the tin doesn't mean it actually is.
Now not everybody may care, but some people do, and here is why:
Parts of the game require GOG Galaxy – which as we all know doesn't exist for Linux – to unlock, specifically a fourth option at starting the game as a Teladi character. This definitely requires modding the game to unlock on Linux.
Also, the so called "Ventures" require you to be online and registered with Egosoft's servers, which allow you to click a button and "send" ships "into other universes" to "collect" rare items and gather crew experience (you don't get to see any of that, they just reappear some time later); some of which you may get without this feature, albeit much less frequently; others you don't.
I haven't tried whether this part works on Linux, and I refuse to, not least because I don't see it as a desirable feature, nor a particularly brilliant example of "gameplay" design.
It remains to be seen whether Egosoft will expand on this "online" feature, or see the error of their ways and remove it, which I doubt – they have already invested into it, and it looks just too tempting to introduce more nifty "features" that let you click a button to be rewarded. And why would they even bother with such trivial nonsense if it weren't that one fine day, that button suddenly requires you to authenticate with the payment provider of your choice?
For the record, I am enjoying the game, and I'm glad I bought it on GOG where at least you have an option to refuse being always monitored online, if at a price.
For the time being.
I will definitely not preorder any future X games, and only even consider buying them once they are proven to be truly free of surveillance DRM and microtransactions. I wonder if alleged "piracy" makes up for even a fraction of the "losses" you "incur" over the guaranteed income you lose by alienating your audience.
Cheers Egosoft, this is coming from a fan of your games from day zero.
Last edited by Valck on 22 October 2019 at 5:02 pm UTC
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