As 2020 comes to a close, here's a brief look over what games we personally thought truly stood out in 2020 that directly supported Linux.
Here's my own personal picks of games I personally enjoyed the most through 2020:
Spiritfarer
With all the terrible things going on in the world, Spiritfarer was a wonderful reminder to slow down and appreciate the little things and life itself.
Spiritfarer felt a bit like the antidote to 2020 that I needed. Take care of spirits, travel slowly around by boat, and eventually let everyone go into the next life. It's an easy game to recommend to pretty much anyone because it's just thoroughly wonderful.
Avorion
I am a space nerd. There, I said it. I really truly am. The final frontier - it's just so exciting and travelling through space in Avorion feels fantastic.
Mine asteroids and watch as they break apart, do a little trading and build up your fleet all while taking in the great atmospere. Not just that though, all the building systems in Avorion make it worthwhile as you build your own ships block by block like it's space Minecraft.
art of rally
A racer that needs no introduction I'm sure. art of rally is one of the best top-down rally racers. Tough as hell too! It's a very different experience to traditional rally games like the DiRT Rally series, and nice to see something a little more accessible and stripped back to just enjoy the ride.
A Monster's Expedition
We have another fantastic relaxing game here on top of Spiritfarer in my list. A Monster's Expedition is easily one of the best puzzle games I've played in a very long time, with an open-ended structure that allows you to explore different sections with a clever progression system that sees you knock down trees to access various different puzzle islands - it's simply magical.
CARRION
Absolutely brutal. Do I need to say more? Probably, but should I? Look, CARRION is absolutely insane. You control a big messy blob of anger and go around eating people.
If you feel like you need to let off a little steam, it fits nicely as you slide around a research complex, growing stronger and causing havoc as you go.
Amnesia: Rebirth
The scariest game of 2020. I definitely never ever want to play it again but I mean that in the best way possible. It was a serious experience, one you have to try but I don't think my body could handle much more from it. Incredible atmosphere and it shows how Frictional Games have still clearly got it when it comes to horror.
SUPERHOT: MIND CONTROL DELETE
SUPER
HOT
SUPER
…you'll understand if you've played it. A first-person shooter where time is almost at a standstill until you move. A much expanded game compared to the original, and to me it was all the better for it. Much more replay value, and just amazing to play through. There's simply nothing else like it.
Superliminal
Not a particularly long puzzle game but I really appreciated the different way it forces you think.
It reminded me of my first time playing the likes of Portal and The Talos Principle because of how unique it is. It's all about getting the right perspective. Pick up an object, and how you look at it will change the size of it. Such a magnificent idea and I wish there was a whole lot more of it.
Disc Room
Love being frustrated? Want a different kind of dungeon-crawling experience? Disc Room is what you need to download. The name says it all, you run through rooms full of spinning discs trying to cut you up. Why are they here though, why are you exploring? Many questions, even more deaths and a whole lot of fun as you duck and dive through many disc rooms. Disc Room is absolutely frantic that you don't want to miss it.
Crusader Kings III
Where do I even start with Crusader Kings III? One of the most deep and complex items in my Steam library, a properly modern grand strategy game from Paradox that's…actually quite inviting and even an idiot like me can enjoy?
I was sold on CKIII pretty quickly. It's a story-teller, and an RPG as much as it is a grand strategy game and one you can play however you want. Not as complex in a few ways as the previous game sure enough, but it doesn't need to be, it's not the same game and it's better for it. Opening up grand strategy to more people and it's never dull.
Notes: I could of course make a much longer list as there's plenty that were awesome but these are just what stood out the most for me personally. Considering how many I enjoyed, this was a real struggle to cut down! There's also a large number I am still yet to personally go through. I decided not to list games on Stadia, since the service has only recently opened up to more people and is still locked away from many countries - it felt a bit unfair. GeForce NOW also doesn't count, since they don't actually support Linux yet but that is planned. Plus, as always, my personal focus is developers supporting Linux because there's already more than enough places focusing on AAA Windows games.
Our livestreamer, Sin, also played quite a lot of games through this year on our Twitch Channel. Here's what Sin thinks stood out the most from what was played:
Littlewood
Now I have put a silly amount of time into this adorable game, but I stand by my statement of this being the relaxing game we needed in the middle of 2020. Littlewood gave me massive Animal Crossing/Stardew Valley vibes and honestly who doesn't enjoy that.
You play a hero that has already saved the world and now it's time to rebuild the village, you also get to name yourself and the village, I am known as Mayor Sin of the village Hell. To rebuild the village, you collect resources, decorate homes, make new friends that will want to move in and hold cute pixel pets!
Littlewood stood out for me this year, because of the easy and yet addictive game play, that just makes you feel wholesome and happy after you play for 10 hours straight!
Children of Morta
Children of Morta was a game I honestly thought I wouldn't enjoy, but boy was I wrong about that. Not only is the art in the game stunning, the story is really beautiful too. Even within the sad moments of the game.
You play as the Bergson family and have to defeat the corruption that is now infecting Mount Morta. There are so many different characters and abilities to play and use within the world, I was a massive fan of Linda and Kevin.
Children of Morta is here purely because not only was the game stunning, but quickly sucked me in, because I needed to know what happened. And, well, because there is always time to do one more dungeon run before logging off for the day!
Hellpoint
So Hellpoint I only just completed, but it was an epic and rage filled adventure to defeat the final boss. Hellpoint is a souls like game that takes place in space! Pretty sweet combo to be honest.
Now Hellpoint was my first souls like game I have ever played, and I quickly learnt that you can't rush the game, and it’s not the best idea running into a boss fight, I will never forgive the cat boss. The areas were super fun to explore and the mobs were great to fight (except one mob that inflicts madness!)
There is so much to Hellpoint too, that on my first run I barely touched the surface. There are so many secrets, tons of weapons and a bunch of gear. That maybe a second run might be in order in the future!
Those are just released games but what about those still in development, like Early Access titles? There’s a lot to appreciate there too that arrived through 2020. Here’s a random five that are absolutely worth looking into that I’ve personally tried and enjoyed:
What have been your favourites that released in some way this year? Let us know in the comments and give over your top recommendations for other readers.
Dishonored (I tried 2.4h, but it crashed my whole computer 2 times, so removed it :()
Wow - I just finished the main campaign (clean hands, ghost) and in 30 hours I think it crashed maybe once, but not the whole system. Running a GTX1050 under KDE Neon (20.04 LTS), I got 130 FPS almost the whole time using Proton 5.13-4. Just starting the DLC tonight.
Last edited by no_information_here on 28 December 2020 at 6:42 pm UTC
Dishonored (I tried 2.4h, but it crashed my whole computer 2 times, so removed it :()
Wow - I just finished the main campaign (clean hands, ghost) and in 30 hours I think it crashed maybe once, but not the whole system. Running a GTX1050 under KDE Neon (20.04 LTS), I got 130 FPS almost the whole time using Proton 5.13-4. Just starting the DLC tonight.
I had much the same experience. Dishonored was one of the first games I played through with Proton and it was absolutely flawless. I didn't experience any crashing in the main campaign, nor the three DLCs. I also bought the two sequels and had similarly flawless experiences with them. They're just such epics titles.
In fact, the original Dishonored is an easy "Top Three of All Time" entries for me. Not sure what the other two are mind you, but I've also had a soft spot for that game and its DLC. Especially the Knife of Dunwall, which was that case where a DLC is better than the original game. Just brilliant games. Brilliant.
Just brilliant games. Brilliant.I agree!
Maybe I could try again with a newer Mesa version.
I'm currently using a Radeon Vega64 with 20.2.4 under Debian Bullseye.
Also enjoying Mount and Blade 2 and MFS 2020 using Shadow cloud computing. Not quite Linux games though, sadly, but I'm glad I can play them from my Linux machine without a dual boot.
I was also very excited about Noita since a long time before it's pre-release, but in the end didn't get the time to play it yet. I sunk a lot of hours into Nimbatus too, but that was before 2020, in one of the betas.
Last edited by Kabouik on 3 January 2021 at 12:21 am UTC
However, get over that hill, and you'll find a game that you can pour literally hundreds of hours into without boredom. I'm well over 200. FuryForged has well over 1100.
I mean, it took me hundreds of attempts to finally beat the game. Then I discovered the Orb runs. And parallel worlds. And Hell. The Gold. Sky. Space. It's absolutely GIGANTIC. Love it.
I enjoyed Stardew valley a lot! with my kid and Into the Breach! (cool!)
Also i found Overland very atmospheric and good.
Deponia is the only adventure title i enjoyed in linux!
Also i played :
- Satisfactory
- Rimworld ,
- Contraption Maker ,
- Northgrad,
- Cities Skylines,
And from libresource:
- Oolite,
- Pingus,
- Supertux,
- FreeOrion,
- Tanks of freedom.
My Stellaris love took a break after felling a in love with Endless Space 2 (unfortunately i cant play it with proton)
Universim was a little let down. Gorgeous in some aspect but not good gameplay.
A small sidetrack and honestly a year is not only happy happy:
...funny Stardew made me thinking about the biggest hurdle of steam. Meaning ..attaching a game to one account only!. I had to buy a second copy from gog.
And frankly i bump my head to the wall for not buying X4,rimworld etc from itch.io , humble or gog.
And finally proton is a blessing but also could be a curse.
Last edited by chomwitt on 3 January 2021 at 9:36 pm UTC
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