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Supraland, a highly rated open-world puzzle adventure, has now removed mentions of Linux on Steam as the developer is unable to actually support it.

This comes shortly after the developer asked for Supraland to be completely removed from GOG, after being there less than a year citing lower sales. If you read that previous linked article, this news likely won't come as much of a surprise. Checking on SteamDB, it seems they removed the note of Linux support earlier in June. Looking around, the developer mentioned this in the official Discord, "I stopped direct linux support. Using the windows version with proton gives much better results like a much higher framerate.".

This quite likely means Supraland 2 that was funded on Kickstarter, which mentioned Linux as a planned supported platform, won't support Linux either if this is how the developer plans to go forwards.

We've seen how the developer has repeatedly mentioned before that they actually "know nothing about linux". A shame but if you're going to sell your game on a platform, that you don't test it on and don't support in any way, what's the point? It's not good for anyone.


A repeating problem too, the weird expectation that clicking to export in a game engine is enough to sell the game without testing or supporting it, which needs to stop. No one would do the same for Windows or Consoles but as usual, it comes down to the low market share cycle of doom. Developers don't support Linux directly with the lower market share, so less people use Linux and repeat. We're at least seeing a clear upwards trend right now, so perhaps one day we can see more direct support when the user share is big enough.

Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
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Ehvis Jun 27, 2020
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Quoting: x_wingThe game works. The only problem is an erroneous deploy on Steam + a bug on the content selection. The attitude makes me remember by a lot to Garry Newman.

I tried it a week or two ago and it crashed on startup with no immediately clear indication of what the problem was.
Shaolu Jun 27, 2020
Quoting: GuestAnother case of "if you are not familiar with linux don't port your game to linux", that will just lead to having a bad time. Developing a game for linux is NOT easy and we all have been guilty of spreading the myth that it is.

Frankly my dream is that ultimately one day the OS you run will become irrelevant and then the "native gaming" nonsense goes away for good.

There's 3 ways an OS can be technically irrelevant to a developer:

1. You're writing an app to run on a cross-platform environment like a browser or VM.
2. Every major OS adheres to some kind of set of open standards with any differences being trivial enough to ignore (effectively like how you can make a website that renders mostly the same on either Chrome or Firefox).
3. You're software interfaces directly with hardware and is effectively its own OS.

#3 is okay if your "game" is a 1980's style old school LED game on a custom piece of hardware, but otherwise completely non-feasible. It would be simpler to at least bundle your game with an OS like how routers build their firmware with a custom slimmed down GNU/Linux distro embedded that the software runs atop.

#1 just kicks the problem up another level of abstraction. Your browser/VM effectively becomes the "platform" that everyone has to use anyhow. Back in the day when Internet Explorer dominated the web and Microsoft first ported it to Mac OS you could technically make a site that targeted just one platform and have it run on multiple OSes by targeting IE... but how wonderful of a solution was that really?

#2 Gets to the real root of the issue. If every game dev used Vulkan/OpenGL, OpenAL, and other cross-platform FOSS technologies in tandem with and part of a cross-platform game engine, then it would be incredibly trivial to make your game available on another OS. Hypothetically it could get to the point where clicking "Export" in Unity or what have you would truly work without issue. And we are closer than ever to getting there.

This is the same reason why it's more important to advocate for people in general to use more FOSS technology in general. The average EU is more concerned about what apps and games they can run on a given platform than anything else. So if you recommend to your friends and family software that run cross-platform then it becomes a lot easier to persuade them to switch their OS and boost market share for GNU/Linux.
Alm888 Jun 27, 2020
I'll just add this to my "Just Use Proton™" collection to remind people later.
Quoting: Whitewolfe80That problem is of course proton has become the clutch we all rely on for games on linux. We have collectively given up on native gaming…
Well, I certainly haven't. "No Tux No Bucks" all the way for me!

P.S. Next on the news: "A developer reveals it is totally not worth it to support Linux on a gamedev confereince".
This fellow will probably feel itself comfortable in the company of Tommy "Linux can f*ck off for all I care" Refenes and Ben "<0.1% of sales but >20% of auto reported crashes and support tickets" Golus.


Last edited by Alm888 on 27 June 2020 at 5:05 pm UTC
PublicNuisance Jun 27, 2020
Good riddance. I think it is a good thing if less developers are on the Linux platform that don't want to put any work in to make a quality Linux game.

Quoting: GuestAnother case of "if you are not familiar with linux don't port your game to linux", that will just lead to having a bad time. Developing a game for linux is NOT easy and we all have been guilty of spreading the myth that it is.

Frankly my dream is that ultimately one day the OS you run will become irrelevant and then the "native gaming" nonsense goes away for good.

Speak for yourself not others. I don't spout garbage like making a Linux version is easy.
x_wing Jun 27, 2020
Quoting: Ehvis
Quoting: x_wingThe game works. The only problem is an erroneous deploy on Steam + a bug on the content selection. The attitude makes me remember by a lot to Garry Newman.

I tried it a week or two ago and it crashed on startup with no immediately clear indication of what the problem was.

Open your game directory, rename/remove "Supraland/Content/Paks/Supraland-WindowsNoEditor.pak" and the game will run flawlessly.


Last edited by x_wing on 27 June 2020 at 5:55 pm UTC
CatKiller Jun 27, 2020
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Quoting: constWe even celebrate those that ignore us but implement a Vulkan renderer.

Would you prefer that individual game devs became more tightly dependent on DirectX rather than developing their cross-platform skillset?
Linuxwarper Jun 27, 2020
Quoting: Whitewolfe80Thing for me its too late yes our marketshare has increased but almost every single video/article that says nows the time to try linux has one draw back proton its all they talk about and lutris I use both so i am part of the problem. That problem is of course proton has become the clutch we all rely on for games on linux. We have collectively given up on native gaming with the exception of indie games and the one to three games we get from feral a year. We have already seen developers say use the proton version if you want a linux version that attitude has quickly become the norm.
Few if anyone has given up on native gaming. It's simply factual that many major games will never be ported to Linux. To play them, we use Proton. And by the time they do come to Linux people will have either moved on or the wait has been so long that you could buy the Windows version of the game far cheaper than the Linux native one.

No matter how much you ask devs for native ports they simply will not come. If they do come by any chance the possibility of it being poorly handled isn't low. To point that as OS is updated the game runs into issues running or it has poor performance.

Developers telling us to rely on Proton for their games proves little about current state of native games. For all you know these devs had in mind a hacky release of their game for Linux. So poorly developed for Linux that Proton preceeds it with ease in performance. What is the point of native games for Linux if these native releases are poorly handled or of poor quality?


Last edited by Linuxwarper on 27 June 2020 at 11:33 pm UTC
Purple Library Guy Jun 28, 2020
Quoting: Whitewolfe80That problem is of course proton has become the clutch we all rely on for games on linux.
Speak for yourself. I've never used it. Not because I'm virtuous, mind you, just because most games I ever play are from Paradox and the rest are ones I read about here.
slaapliedje Jun 28, 2020
Quoting: Guest
Quoting: omer666It's more of a monopoly problem than a low market share problem. Back in the days, porting a game on 4/5 different OS was the norm.
Today all computers run on x86 architecture, all you need for testing your game on Linux is to install the damn distro.

Ignoring the main topic a little, "back in the day" games were also far less complicated to write. Game engines could likely be maintained and ported by a single person, or very small teams. It's far more complex these days.

...not to say that I don't think you're right. I do think you're right. They could just install GNU/Linux (and by now it's fairly easy to find the most popular) to do at least basic testing for a version they're asking people to pay money for.
I actually think the opposite is true. These days we have IDEs, we have prebuilt game engines and the 'click here to port to other platforms' option. I believe this one uses the Unreal Engine and that is how he 'supported' Linux in the first place, is clicked that button.

I mess around with a lot of retro systems. One would think porting from the Atari 8bit computers to the 5200 game console (and the other way) would be easy! They are basically the exact same hardware. Main differences is the memory banking, and the control mechanisms. But there are more subtle things you have to do, like memory mapping (and remembering where BASIC is on the 8bit computer line, etc.)

While it is true, if you're going to write a new game from scratch, the complexities you can put into it can be far greater than what used to be the case, the better development tools, the prebuilt engines, and hell even artwork packs you can buy for making your game. It's kind of sort of come full circle, from the single digit team of coders working in basements and releasing games on a floppy disk in a ziplock bag, to now you can have a single digit team working out of basements with things like RPG Maker, or Unreal, or Unity and using game art packs, etc. I've thought for a while that I should dabble with RPG Maker, but I have too many other things I'm working on...

This still is no excuse for developers to be like 'hey we think we got all the money we're gonna get from Linux customers, so let's just yank support so we don't have to actually support it...' Guess I won't be buying Supraland 2
saturnoyo Jun 28, 2020
Quoting: mylkacan we talk about "support" here? he just press the "compile for linux" button and hopes for the best!
i wouldnt call that "support", so he cant stop supporting it, if he never supported it

Yep, we have lost nothing. It amazes me how unprofessional some people are.

How can you sell something that you haven't even tested? How can you say that you support a platform when you don't even look at it?

And then they go and blame Linux for all the amount of bugs that the game has in it. I wonder how many bugs they fixed in windows. Hundreds or thousands I guess, it's the normal process of creating a game. But for some reason they think Linux will just work with no extra work.

For some time I was interested in this game, it (still) looks great. But I investigated more about it before buying and I lost all my interest. Some people don't deserve my money and I don't deserve their games.

It's a pity. At least the developer is not hiding what they do. I would be extremely ashamed if I were so bad at my job.
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