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Frozenbyte being the developer behind titles like the Trine series, Shadwen, Has-Been Heroes and the upcoming Starbase talks a little about Proton and future native Linux support. If you're not clear on what Proton and Steam Play are, be sure to check out our constantly updated dedicated page. It's a special compatibility layer for running Windows games and apps from Steam on Linux.

If you're not aware, Frozenbyte did previously have their games ported over to Linux but they eventually stopped after the release of Shadwen in 2016. The latest Trine 4 and their other titles don't have Linux version. With Starbase that's due to release tomorrow (July 29, 2021), there's a post on the Steam forum from a user asking about Linux support and Frozenbyte developer Jukka Larja (JLarja) replied on July 27 to explain it's not a priority:

With Proton being as good as it is, native support is not very high on our list. In fact (without actually trying the native versions on modern Linux distro) I would recommend Proton emulation over native versions for all the previous games we've released. Changes are you'll get better graphics quality, likely less trouble getting the game running and input working, and possible better performance too. For low-on-resources port Proton is simply superior.

If Linux gaming takes off (for example, because Steam Deck becomes a huge success), then we'll have a reason to consider not-so-low-on-resources port, which may (and probably does) change the picture somewhat. At the moment we have Xbox Series X/S higher on our porting targets list though (not for Starbase currently, but for other future projects).

I imagine there will be plenty more of this, especially for older ports where performance wasn't top and some that might have other issues. Proton isn't just something that's good to ensure Linux gamers and Steam Deck users get to play the latest games, it's also (as even porter Ethan Lee has pointed out), good for being an "essential preservation project" for older Windows games to keep them working nicely.

What is interesting to see is a mention of it being possibility if the Steam Deck is a success. People will argue on one side about there not being a point if Proton gets to the stage where Windows games can just run out of the box on Linux with Proton, but there is the other side that a native Linux build gives developers more control and flexibility on their games compared with handing it all over to Valve. Either way, that and more depends on how the Steam Deck goes.

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Lofty Jul 28, 2021
Quoting: CatKillerWell, that's the dilemma, isn't it? Can you squeeze £6 worth of value out of a £60 game before they break it? On the bright side, by the time a game gets to 90% off they've often stopped making breaking changes.

This is EXACTLY how i have been using proton since it's inception. I buy games i intend to play on proton on heavy Discount and usually a year or so after they have come out and the fundamental game/engine updates have been completed and all that might be left is DLC. there is a higher chance of it working out of the gate.
const Jul 28, 2021
I think Frozenbyte is one of many developers that got a totally wrong idea of Linux port rentability because of the Humble Indy Bundles. I have like 3 licenses for all of their games ported to Linux and I guess that's true for all of us who were gaming on Linux before Steam on Linux really got a thing. Now sure we didn't buy their games on Steam any more, we already had them. Then they looked at sales statistics and we got irrelevant. No surprise, really.
Anyway, they were among the first to jump the Humble Linux train that got everything started and I'll never forget that. Linux gaming today only exists because of some critical events and the HIBs were a key part of this.


Last edited by const on 28 July 2021 at 11:32 pm UTC
ElectricPrism Jul 29, 2021
Quoting: Purple Library Guy
Quoting: ElectricPrismAll the AAA simping and white knighting of why AAA games can't support Linux cuz "tem not has enough li nuks mons 4 coleg" is completely dashed to pieces by what we saw at Activision+Blizzard. No wonder their catalog has been absolute trash for the last few years.
Holy Bacon! I went and looked this up--what a bunch of complete vicious incompetent assholes.

Yeah

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xIhLpyORlis

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CNhMWJsQ7QM

Apparently the Blizzard women employees who are victims have had their spotlight & thunder now hijacked by Activists and Con-artists seeking to profit from Virtue-Shilling their services, products and trying to funnel donation money into their own organizations seeking their own unaligned agendas.

So sad for the women and employees who were actually getting noticed, now Forign Activist Virtue-Shilling will cause the public to loose solidarity with the actual victims and they will be drowned out by the moronic actions of a few activists who don't even work at Blizzard. RIP Women's Rights. Sad.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5JuJXDG5S3s


Last edited by ElectricPrism on 29 July 2021 at 6:10 am UTC
Termy Jul 29, 2021
TBH, better official Proton support than a bad Port - that much i agree with.
But dropping native without committing to keep the game running well in default proton is just bad...
Liam Dawe Jul 29, 2021
Please keep it on topic, let's not drag the Blizzard situation into something totally unrelated.
Beamboom Jul 29, 2021
I see so many talk about Stadia this and Stadia that, like running on the Stadia servers requires a Linux build.

Where did that idea originate from? The way I see it it's exceptionally logical, to he borders of being guaranteed, that Stadia are running the games using a transitional layer, very likely Proton or a derivative therefrom? I mean, with "unlimited" processing powers of a data center there's next to no argument to NOT do do...?
CatKiller Jul 29, 2021
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Quoting: BeamboomI see so many talk about Stadia this and Stadia that, like running on the Stadia servers requires a Linux build.


It does. Stadia instances are running Debian with AMD graphics. They aren't running Windows.

QuoteWhere did that idea originate from? The way I see it it's exceptionally logical, to he borders of being guaranteed, that Stadia are running the games using a transitional layer, very likely Proton or a derivative therefrom? I mean, with "unlimited" processing powers of a data center there's next to no argument to NOT do do...?
Approximately 3 included DXVK with their Stadia build. Stadia have recently relaxed their stance on translation layers to allow more than that, and have started including tooling of their own for that purpose.
Beamboom Jul 29, 2021
Quoting: CatKiller
Quoting: BeamboomI see so many talk about Stadia this and Stadia that, like running on the Stadia servers requires a Linux build.


It does. Stadia instances are running Debian with AMD graphics. They aren't running Windows.

You didn't read my post correctly. I know it runs Linux, my point is that this fact do do NOT automatically mean that every game that runs on it is a Linux BUILD. Just like you and I run a lot of Windows games on our Linux rigs.

Even if a game is on Stadia, it does not logically mean there has to be a Linux build of it. Not when Proton is as good as it is and they are running on massive data centers that presumably can handle the little extra overhead required for Proton/Wine.


Last edited by Beamboom on 29 July 2021 at 10:43 am UTC
Beamboom Jul 29, 2021
Quoting: GuestThe info came from Google themselves.

... The info that ALL games running on the Stadia service have to be native Linux builds? No wine/proton or equivalent layers in cases where no native build is available?

That begs the question, why?

I mean, sure, some devs are building native builds for Stadia. I know. And cool of them. But is that like a requirement, an absolute rule to be included in the Stadia library? Because technically I don't see why it should be like that at all! Sounds to me like an utterly artificial and quite illogical limitation.


Last edited by Beamboom on 29 July 2021 at 10:53 am UTC
Liam Dawe Jul 29, 2021
Quoting: BeamboomThat begs the question, why?
Due to it being streaming, it's super sensitive to anything especially anything that might cause a bit more input lag. However, we know for a fact that multiple games on Stadia use DXVK-Native. However, the games themselves are Linux builds but they do still need Stadia specific adjustments for their SDK, input and so on.

Edit: oh, and of course Google has spent millions getting developers to port to it too.


Last edited by Liam Dawe on 29 July 2021 at 10:51 am UTC
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