Two bits of major news to cover for the Steam Play Proton compatibility layer, with some exciting major changes coming in with updates. Don't know what Steam Play Proton is? Go take a look at our dedicated page.
Firstly, if you have an AMD GPU and you don't mind grabbing the latest development code for the Mesa graphics drivers - Cyberpunk 2077 should actually work on Linux with the new Proton 5.13-4 release. Valve developer Pierre-Loup Griffais mentioned that CD PROJEKT RED allowed them some early testing time to get the work done for both vkd3d (the Direct3D 12 to Vulkan layer) and radv (the AMD Mesa Vulkan driver). As an NVIDIA GPU owner, this makes me quite jealous as it seems my only other current choice on Linux is Stadia or GeForce NOW (unofficially - until later in 2021).
Additionally, there's now also a new Proton Experimental branch available which has the start of major architectural changes to Wine. This brings with it a plan to reduce CPU overhead and improve performance in scenarios related to input and windowing. Seems Proton Experimental is an additional version of Proton, so you would install it along side the other versions currently available for this compatibility tool.
You can find the Proton changelog here.
Need help and / or tech support? Be sure to check out our dedicated Forum.
Quoting: ShmerlNothing extra, straight download from GOG. It is weird that it's so huge while the game is 60 GB. May be it's languages like above.
I've read there was a 50gb patch, maybe you downloaded the game, they released the patch during download and you ended up needing to download another 50gb.
IMO vkd3d has a fair way to go when up against dxvk (dx11)
Last edited by TheRiddick on 10 December 2020 at 6:12 am UTC
Quoting: TheRiddickI've read there was a 50gb patch, maybe you downloaded the game, they released the patch during download and you ended up needing to download another 50gb.
GOG provide static installers, and files are all the same version. Installed game is OK (60 GB), but 100 GB of the installer is puzzling. Unless they bundled the game and a patch in it, instead of just a patched game? That would be weird.
Last edited by Shmerl on 10 December 2020 at 6:13 am UTC
Just to give an idea how it can be done:
lgogdownloader --galaxy-platform w --galaxy-delete-orphans --subdir-galaxy-install cyberpunk_2077 --galaxy-install 1423049311
Last edited by Shmerl on 10 December 2020 at 6:29 am UTC
Quoting: LungDragoQuoting: LeopardQuoting: rustybroomhandleWondering what the specific missing features are in the Nvidia driver preventing this from working.
Amusingly, Assassin's Creed: Valhalla with vkd3d works on Nvidia but not AMD.
This extension is needed.
VK_VALVE_mutable_descriptor_type
Currently only implemented on RADV.
Any at least a ballpark ETA on when can we expect Nvidia to catch up? I haven't really been interested in playing a day 0 release before so I have no experience or data on this.
No ETA on that i'm afraid.
Quoting: LinuxwarperFirst off, any developer tries to make their game work on Linux through Proton is not against Linux. Regardless of how many people has wished for GOG Galaxy and Cyberpunk natively, you can't deny the market share. It's not enough to sustain native development of the scale that Cyberpunk is.
They did all the work to make a native version of the scale of Cyberpunk 2077 already: they developed it for Debian using Vulkan. They just won't sell it to us.
CDPR's involvement in "making it work on Linux through Proton" was bunging Valve a beta key, which cost them literally nothing. Valve wrote an extension for Vulkan to make it work, Valve contributed to Mesa to make it work, Valve hired developers to work on Proton to make it work; CDPR did absolutely nothing.
Developers should be rewarded for their support of Linux gaming, but CDPR haven't given any. Quite the opposite, in fact.
Quoting: WorMzyI'll wait for a native port. If the devs don't support Linux, then I don't support the devs.
Definitly you are right. But if the devs are working on a bit of linux (and or compability tools) isnt it worth to support them?
actually we would do great if we find a way to show them we are interested their games. maybe a linux gaming market bla bla or some statistics about how many games played under linux how many times bla bla.
so the companies can see and calculate aprox income if they release their products for linux too.
Nevermind. i will wait until Vulkan renderer implements. and will try my nv gpu.
Now I kinda wish I bought it on Steam cause holy shit, good job Valve.
Last edited by Sundragon on 10 December 2020 at 7:07 am UTC
Quoting: Linuxwarperany developer tries to make their game work on Linux through Proton is not against Linux.
Let's not give undue credit; unless I am missing something, all that the developers did in this instance was make the game available to Valve in advance - which they also do for press reviewers and such. That doesn't sound like effort to me.
https://ibb.co/zGpZ9Jr
https://ibb.co/y8nDVp0
Last edited by ikiruto on 10 December 2020 at 7:41 am UTC
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