Despite the rising amount of people believing Stadia won't be around for long, we're into another year and Google have announced that more than 100 games will release for Stadia through 2021.
After a pretty rough time with Terraria cancelled and bridges burned, along with Stadia shutting down first-party game development which left a lot of Stadia users worried they definitely needed to put out some good news. In a fresh community post, the Stadia team officially announced "more than 100 games that will be added to the Stadia store for our players in 2021".
Here's more of what they just recently confirmed:
Shantae: Half-Genie Hero Ultimate Edition (Feb. 23)
Direct Link
Shantae: Risky's Revenge - Director's Cut (Feb. 23)
Direct Link
It came from space and ate our brains (Mar. 2)
Direct Link
FIFA 21 (Mar. 17)
Direct Link
Kaze and the Wild Masks (Mar. 26)
Direct Link
Judgment (Apr. 23)
Direct Link
Killer Queen Black
Direct Link
Street Power Football
Direct Link
Hellpoint
Direct Link
The Stadia team also reiterated that plenty more are also confirmed and have been announced previously like Far Cry 6, Riders Republic and Hello Engineer.
You can play on Stadia.com with a Chrome based browser.
I don't begrudge Stadia for existing. Sure, exist, chew up all the bandwidth you want. (seriously, it's ecological disaster levels of bandwidth) But it bothers me that in all likelihood, precisely 0 of these games will see a native Linux release anywhere else.
Quoting: rustybroomhandleThis depresses me.It is a shame on that level yes but for the Linux desktop there's just no good marketing going on backed up with hardware. The reason all the games go to Stadia is it has marketing and a company properly backing it. Whereas we have Valve with Proton which still isn't advertised anywhere on Steam for over two years - and when it is, you'll then probably see even less developers caring about direct support. Many things to think on...
I don't begrudge Stadia for existing. Sure, exist, chew up all the bandwidth you want. (seriously, it's ecological disaster levels of bandwidth) But it bothers me that in all likelihood, precisely 0 of these games will see a native Linux release anywhere else.
As for market share etc. Disturbing as it is, Steam China will likely push up the Linux share over time more than the rest of the world.
Quoting: rustybroomhandleWhen Proton does get marketed to developers it will be in the form of a feature complete build target. ie "Here, support this, ktnx"That's just Windows. There is no special Proton build target, it's just Windows.
Quoting: GuestThe amount of reactionary doom mongering and told you sos in the past 2 weeks compared with the silence from the same people now speaks volumes. They are little more than hate for clicks peddlersYou just described most youtubers and most other content creators :P
People connected the dots and thought that: Stadia Linux releases > Linux desktop releases. And when that didn't happened they felt betrayed, they felt like a promise was broken.
Well, Stadia took no obligation to release Linux desktop games, there was no promise of that and the disappointed people have only themselves to blame for their own wishful thinking.
Also, why blame specifically Stadia for Linux builds not reaching the Linux desktop?
What Stadia did was opened the path to Linux builds for publishers/developers, and now these publishers/developers have the tools and know how to do a Linux build. And when they still choose not to release for the Linux desktop, is it Stadia preventing them to do so? No, is the same publisher/developer motivation as always (true or just perceived): Linux desktop market share, distro fragmentation, anti cheat etc.
However, the one motive that they no longer can invoke now is "we don't know how". Is at least one motive less, and this might come in handy someday for us.
Last edited by dubigrasu on 14 February 2021 at 9:36 pm UTC
Quoting: Liam DaweQuoting: rustybroomhandleWhen Proton does get marketed to developers it will be in the form of a feature complete build target. ie "Here, support this, ktnx"That's just Windows. There is no special Proton build target, it's just Windows.
I should have said test target. "Windows" is not a single thing either. Windows 8, 10 (+variants), 7 (in some cases still), GPU types + drivers. Whatever the developer chooses to support, these must all get tested, and more importantly, built from the ground up to not include things that do not work on their chosen supported platforms.
I'm saying if Valve can provide a feature complete Proton that they support, then they could maybe talk some developers into adding this to their list of supported targets.
Anyway, I'm not a moron, Liam.
Quoting: rustybroomhandleI'm saying if Valve can provide a feature complete Proton that they support, then they could maybe talk some developers into adding this to their list of supported targets.That makes more sense. However, feature complete? Any time Windows and DirectX change, it will be playing catch up. I don't think it will be possible to have such a thing.
Quoting: rustybroomhandleAnyway, I'm not a moron, Liam.Weird way to sign off your post, didn't in any way suggest you were ... and people say I can be quite blunt? Heh.
QuoteWeird way to sign off your post, didn't in any way suggest you were ... and people say I can be quite blunt? Heh.
Sounded patronising. Anyhoo (insert some tone-clarifying emoji here because internet and I'm old)
Last edited by rustybroomhandle on 13 February 2021 at 5:22 pm UTC
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