Garry Newman from Facepunch Studios has put out a new blog post detailing their final plans for the Linux version of the survival game Rust.
It's quite an open and honest post about the state of things, noting that they didn't really do a good job of actually supporting the Linux version. The post mentions how they never routinely tested it, unless they knew something was wrong. Newman also mentions how the "quiet majority" of Linux gamers accept that they're often a second-class citizen but we shouldn't be as we are paying the same. Which is why they made the decision to stop supporting Linux originally in July last year.
Their plan for the Linux version going forward is to split it away from Windows and Mac, along with getting no new features but it will see "maintenance patches". So Linux owners can still play it and play online together, but not with Windows and Mac players.
Facepunch will also not work on any future Linux games, as they "can't/won't properly support it".
A shame this happened, but nice to finally draw a line under it and know exactly what's happening.
If you are after a survival game that's supported on Linux, I can recommend 7 Days to Die which is really good fun [Humble Store - Steam]. Our livestreamer, Sin, regularly shows it off on our Twitch Channel.
Quoting: sigzWell, fair enough. Now they could just ensure their game is fully compatible with proton.It uses Easy Anti-Cheat, so until that's fully supported in Steam Play it's not possible.
thats no good news. I Hope valve will hurry up with the EAC as the windows client in wine (last time i tried, non eac server) worked way way better anyway, with double the framerates of native client
Last edited by dubigrasu on 9 August 2019 at 6:20 pm UTC
It is bad. But the previous news suggested it was going to be even worse... the idea that games sold with Linux support could suddenly stop having it is just scary.
Last edited by Whitewolfe80 on 9 August 2019 at 7:22 pm UTC
Simplest solution is to work with other parties aiming towards PROTON support. Much easier than maintaining a whole separate version of the game.
Quoting: dubigrasuA Linux version with separated server/s will wither an die IMO. No point in maintaining it I believe.
Exactly
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