Klei Entertainment have now announced Griftlands, again (see here), although they hit the restart button on it and it's turned into a single-player deck building game where you negotiate, fight, steal or otherwise persuade others to get your way.
First up, the bad news: It's going to the Epic Games Store first. However, they replied to me on Twitter to confirm Linux will be supported and to point out their forum post with a lot more details. It will be on Epic's store for one year, with a launch in Early Access on Steam next June. At the bottom of the post, is this mention about Linux "We will be supporting PC during Alpha and Early Access. We will be adding OSX and Linux support in the future.".
Here's their announcement trailer:
Direct Link
At least this time, they're giving a solid confirmation of Linux support. As when they originally announced it years ago, it wasn't too clear if it would be.
I love basically everything Klei make, this also looks awesome so I will be taking a look when it hits Steam since the Epic Store does not support Linux and has no current plan to.
If you're interested, their Steam page is up ready for a wishlist/follow.
I wonder what's happened to The Floor is Lava, or Hot Lava, or whatever their first-person parkour game was called. I'd have though it was better fodder for Epic Store than Griftlands!
Last edited by scaine on 10 June 2019 at 9:00 pm UTC
Announcing hot new game #3!
Woo! Cool! *gets wallet ready*
Epic store exclusive!
*closes wallet quietly*
Wait, next year it will be in early access on Steam? Then I don't see what's the problem with being on Epic store before. It will not even be finished, when launching on Steam. Calm down guys and let the Epic-Store-guys do the beta testing ;)In cases like this, I don't mind too much. We get a more complete game, with confirmed Linux support from a developer with a good history of supporting us.
I despise the Epic Store and everything it represents, but I can't extend that derision to Klei over this.
Anyway, guess we'll see in a year+ if this is worth paying attention to.
i hope some publisher will do this in the future
win and osx on epic and linux on gog and steam
And, I have too much of an unplayed game backlog to care too much about waiting a bit longer for another game :P
Edit* clarity
Last edited by Stick on 11 June 2019 at 8:28 am UTC
First, Klei has good history for supporting Linux and its gamer. Even their old game like Mark of the Ninja and Don't Starve is still updated. So, while this Epic Exclusive thing is a bit annoying, we should go easy on Klei, especially since they promise that Griftlands will be available for Linux in Steam.
Second, Griftlands has been under development for around 4-5 years. That long development time is painful, both from mental and money side. This double for small indie company like Klei. So, financially, it's understandable that Klei took the exclusive contract with Epic.
Third, the game will only be Epic Exclusive for 1 year while the game is still in Alpha phase, and will go to Steam in early access. IMHO this is fine, because the exclusivity is only for Alpha phase where the developer (usually) still only focusing on the game concept. This is why the Alpha game usually buggy, unbalanced and barely have any content. So, IMHO let those Epic users play and test the game for one year, while us Linux users wait for it to be ready. Of course, it's different stories if the final game is still only Epic Exclusive.
Finally, the contract between Klei and Epic has already signed. So, no matter how much we hate it, the ship has been sailed and there are no way for Klei to break it, no matter how many backlash and complains from the community.
Bottom line, as Linux gamers, IMHO instead of boycotting them, we should just wishlist their game on Steam and tell them that we, the Linux gamers, are waiting for them in Steam (and GOG), but never in Epic. This way, hopefully they know that we do love them and their game, but we won't be able to support them if they are in another castle.
Last edited by sub on 11 June 2019 at 12:26 pm UTC
Lot's of our heroes turn out to not care *that much* about Linux.
Not like you can blame them though of course. They have a business to run, regardless of how passionate they are about ideals. If I was put in the position of dropping 2-3% of my sales in order to instantly gain masses of capital? It's a no-brainer. People have families to feed, jobs to secure.
Anyone who argues otherwise is just disconnected from reality, I think.
I still hate Epic for their tactics of course, but maybe some actual good can come of the money they're flinging around - smaller devs getting big capital payouts and guaranteed sales, competition for Steam, and hopefully very little impact on Linux as a whole.
I'm grasping for a silver lining, of course, but I think there's a definite over reaction to all this.
I still hate Epic for their tactics of course, but maybe some actual good can come of the money they're flinging around - smaller devs getting big capital payouts and guaranteed sales, competition for Steam, and hopefully very little impact on Linux as a whole.
What I hate most about the situation is that the smaller indie devs are actually abused by Epic in that "war" and it seems like they don't even realize it.
I think it is pretty short sighted. Sure, they get a bunch of money now, but they not only dropped Linux sales, but also the sales of Windows gamers that won't buy Epic exclusives and maybe even put the company on their blacklist of publishers not to buy games from. In the long run, this may amount to more losses than they gained with a one time payment from Epic.Lot's of our heroes turn out to not care *that much* about Linux.
Not like you can blame them though of course. They have a business to run, regardless of how passionate they are about ideals. If I was put in the position of dropping 2-3% of my sales in order to instantly gain masses of capital? It's a no-brainer. People have families to feed, jobs to secure.
I think it is pretty short sighted. Sure, they get a bunch of money now, but they not only dropped Linux sales, but also the sales of Windows gamers that won't buy Epic exclusives and maybe even put the company on their blacklist of publishers not to buy games from. In the long run, this may amount to more losses than they gained with a one time payment from Epic.Lot's of our heroes turn out to not care *that much* about Linux.
Not like you can blame them though of course. They have a business to run, regardless of how passionate they are about ideals. If I was put in the position of dropping 2-3% of my sales in order to instantly gain masses of capital? It's a no-brainer. People have families to feed, jobs to secure.
I think that's incredibly unlikely. Epic pay for the exclusive and also guarantee a minimum number of sales. Klei would have to work hard to lose anything by this. I think the numbers already show that not nearly enough people care about voting with their wallet. Coffee Stains latest game, Satisfactory sold half a million units already. Time will tell, I suppose.
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