Check out our Monthly Survey Page to see what our users are running.
We do often include affiliate links to earn us some pennies. See more here.

For today's Sunday Section we're going over a few missed bits and pieces for Linux, open source and gaming topics while also asking you that all important question.

Firstly, Steam has a fresh Steam Client Beta up! Well, there's actually been a few recently but one in particular released on April 26 caught my eye. Valve has upgraded the video decoder on all platforms, with Linux now using VA-API 0.2 for optional hardware decode functionality. So those of you with an AMD GPU should see a nicer experience for Remote Play.

Audacity, the open source and powerful multi-track audio editor and recorder now has new owners as it's now part of the Muse Group. Confirming the move on the official blog, James Crook mentioned how they were "scared and excited". See the announcement video:

YouTube Thumbnail
YouTube videos require cookies, you must accept their cookies to view. View cookie preferences.
Accept Cookies & Show   Direct Link

Krita, the fabulous open source painting program has a new Development Fund, which is based on the model used by the very successful Blender. This new system is more open to the public, showing what funding they're currently getting and allows you to easily adjust what you donate. They currently get €1,959 a month from donations on this system.

Remember the craziness that was the University of Minnesota's (UMN) getting effectively banned from contributing to the Linux Kernel, over some "research" being done to introduce malicious patches "Hypocrite Commits"? Well, the Linux Foundation's Technical Advisory Board (TAB) has issued their report on it. Thankfully, the vast majority were actual good commits. As a result of what's happened, the TAB will be working "with researchers (to be named soon) to develop a document describing a set of best practices for researchers to follow when working with the kernel community".

Star Citizen, the crowdfunded in-development multiplayer space trading and combat simulation game that's been in development for a long time now should still be coming to Linux. While you should take it with a pinch of salt, as Star Citizen is still in flux and a long way for being properly released, team member Silvan-CIG mentioned recently in reply to a request about Linux:

It's on our list! Chris Bolte is pushing for it the whole time. Once we have vulkan we will do a Linux Build one day

Do you love Total War Warhammer? Well Total War: WARHAMMER III from Creative Assembly and Feral Interactive is getting a first gameplay reveal on Thursday 13th May at 5 PM BST / 9 AM PT. Check out their teaser:

YouTube Thumbnail
YouTube videos require cookies, you must accept their cookies to view. View cookie preferences.
Accept Cookies & Show   Direct Link

Finally: the party game Drawful 2 from Jackbox Games now has the free International Update out now! Adding in support for German, French, Italian, and Spanish translations for many more people to enjoy it.

As for the all important question: what have you been playing recently and is it any good? Let your fellow readers know your latest suggestions.

For me, I've been playing plenty of Half-Life: Alyx on our Twitch Channel and it's every bit as fantastic as I was hoping. Will have thoughts on VR coming this week! Plus plenty of Groove Gunner, which is a great VR rhythm-shooting game.

Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
Tags: Misc, Round-up
8 Likes
About the author -
author picture
I am the owner of GamingOnLinux. After discovering Linux back in the days of Mandrake in 2003, I constantly checked on the progress of Linux until Ubuntu appeared on the scene and it helped me to really love it. You can reach me easily by emailing GamingOnLinux directly.
See more from me
The comments on this article are closed.
31 comments
Page: «2/2
  Go to:

g000h May 9, 2021
I've been dabbling with some different games to usual...

Fury Unleashed (from the latest Humble Choice) - I really like this style of rogue-lite twin-stick shooter-platformer. It plays well and does lots of things right, but for me I'm finding the game quite frustrating because I'm unable to complete the first chapter and access later levels. The reason that I'm failing - because the game has two settings - "Hard" which is aimed at Pro-gamers (using a gamepad) and "Easy" which is aimed at everyone else but doesn't give you Steam Achievements if you use it. I'm playing on Hard with a keyboard and mouse (I prefer keyboard and mouse rather than an easier-to-use gamepad) - Thus, I cannot progress. Still, I keep on coming back for more and more punishment.

A couple of years ago, I completed Broforce on default settings (using keyboard and mouse, not gamepad).. so I'm not completely useless in this genre.

I tried out card-battler game Iris and the Giant and it's okay. Worth returning to and trying some more.

I've played two native Windows titles on Linux using Proton: Lovecraft's Untold Stories - a twin-stick shooter, and Blazing Beaks - another rogue-lite twin-stick shooter. Both of those games worked fine with Proton and show promise.

I've installed Project Zomboid and gone through the tutorial - It looks like I'll appreciate this one, too. Noting that it is worth installing the Beta release of this which has more features added, rather than the regular stable release.
lukas333 May 10, 2021
Came back to Doom 2016, it's great fun and the soundtrack is really good.
robvv May 10, 2021
Edge of Eternity (via Proton as native is still unstable): now on chapter 5 and finding it very rewarding!

Got back into Jupiter Hell recently. It's a brilliant strategy game with cool weapons/upgrades and a variety of monsters. I'm rubbish at it but it's great fun :-)
denyasis May 10, 2021
XCOM: Enemy Within. I remember when the original came out and thought it looked corny and dumb when I looked at the box in Babbage's.

I am very wrong. The remake is a lot of fun. For no smart reason I'm only playing ironman so, I'm on my third game. Hopefully all my dudes won't die... Again.

No Man's Sky. I finished the main quest and uninstalled. It was a good game, but the survival-craft thing doesn't seem to be a genre I enjoy. I think I still find games that rely on random generation exclusively rather unfulfilling.


Last edited by denyasis on 10 May 2021 at 12:56 am UTC
D34VA_ May 10, 2021
I just beat Control and its expansions via Control Ultimate Edition on Steam via Proton Experimental. Runs great, and now I'm ready to go back and play Adam Wake.
furaxhornyx May 10, 2021
View PC info
  • Supporter Plus
Finally got the time to launch Loop Hero, 12 hours in, and many more ahead !
Initially I wasn't too much attracted by the game and its poor graphics (pixel "art", but very far from Dead Cells and much more like Baba-is-You - Zoomed Out Edition...), but after watching a streamer playing it, the gameplay looked solid... and it is

Also, some friends made me discover TFT (through Lutris), but the action on the screen is quite a mess, and as an old League of Legend player, nothing makes much sense in it
ShabbyX May 10, 2021
I finally got it into playing oxygen not included (in a way that I can actually manage to get by), and that's after hours of youtube watching and wiki reading.
damarrin May 10, 2021
View PC info
  • Supporter Plus
Resident Evil Village on PS5 has taken up all my free time since Thursday evening. Very similar to VII and yet very different. I just love Resident Evil, even the weaker outings. Except for 6, that's terrible.
vindicivuoto May 10, 2021
In major news, after much toil and strife, I've finally finished Divinity: Original Sin 2. Despite holding every advantage in the final fight, I still managed to make it a tense and almost insurmountable experience. If not for the style over substance writing, this and the previous game would've won a lofty spot among my favorites, but even as it is, I just can't stop playing, to the point of starting, against better judgment, an honor mode run. Wish me dumb luck.

I play with Proton-6.4-GE-1. Aside from some rare freezes and crashing, as well as rather frequent FPS drops that occur when you save your progress and force you to relaunch the game, performance was fine, at least for someone as patient as I am. A proper Linux port would've been nice though. Oh well ...

Also played Shadowrun Returns. Nifty little game with an XCOM feel to combat and refreshingly solid writing. No need to fumble with Proton, no performance issues. I've read about some nasty bugs but never encountered any myself, or they were minor enough that I missed them.

Lastly, replayed Dreamfall: The Longest Journey after many years, and it evokes the same sense of wonder that it did back in the day. Beautiful story, but also unfinished, and I’m definitely biased anyway, so I'd hesitate to actually recommend it. It was just great to revisit it, especially after playing through the original game and being able to pick up on all those references that I'd missed as a kid.

On a more pragmatic note, has anyone here tried both the first Bioshock and its remastered version? Which one runs better on Linux? I don't care about visuals or quality of life improvements, only stability.


Last edited by vindicivuoto on 10 May 2021 at 11:41 am UTC
Dunc May 10, 2021
For some reason that I'm not entirely sure of myself, I've been playing The Lego Ninjago Movie Videogame. I picked it up for free, or in a bundle, or something, ages ago.

I've never had any problem with cynical toy marketing tie-in campaigns, but it was nice, growing up, to have a brand that seemed to stand against all that stuff. Remember when Lego only came in five colours? (Just me? Urgh, I'm getting old.) However it seems that simplicity and innocence are, like, so last century, so apparently now Lego has a line of wisecracking ninjas with their own Saturday-morning cartoon to sell the stuff. It's like seeing your maiden aunt twerking to K-pop. (Or whatever it is the young people do with their time these days.)

Still, it's a TT Lego game, which are always a fun way to pass a few hours, and doesn't deviate too much from the established formula while subtly tweaking the score multiplier into a (very) minimal beat-'em-up-style combo system, which is a nice touch. Plus, although I'm probably missing a ton of fan service, I have to admit that there are a few funny lines in there, too.
Arten May 10, 2021
Final Fantasy XV
Stellaris
While you're here, please consider supporting GamingOnLinux on:

Reward Tiers: Patreon. Plain Donations: PayPal.

This ensures all of our main content remains totally free for everyone! Patreon supporters can also remove all adverts and sponsors! Supporting us helps bring good, fresh content. Without your continued support, we simply could not continue!

You can find even more ways to support us on this dedicated page any time. If you already are, thank you!
The comments on this article are closed.