After a successful Kickstarter campaign back in 2018, developer Eggnut released their post-noir narrative adventure Backbone in June 2021. Sadly, they've decided not to go through with the official Linux support on it.
This is a crowdfunding campaign that did very clearly have Linux down as a platform from the beginning, so it's not the best of looks. Especially to get the announcement that it's no longer planned eight months after the initial launch. What's the reasoning being given? Here's what they said in the Kickstarter announcement:
We're very sorry to announce that we won't be porting Backbone to Linux in the near future. We did our best to do it in-house, but it took immeasurable amount of time and effort, and making it work properly would require creating a dev environment to work in which we don't have the resources for because we're deep in production for our next game. We are not in the financial position to hire another party to do the porting for us. We absolutely understand the frustration these news might bring, and we're ready to offer you these solutions:
For backers, they've offered a key for any other platform or a full refund if you prefer. That is at least a lot better than some, as we've seen plenty of other projects decide not to do Linux after including it in funding and not offer anything. Still, it's a frustrating situation, especially to be told they don't have a development environment set up for it — after being in development overall for multiple years and already being supported on Windows for over half a year.
What about Steam Play Proton, can you run it there? Reports seem mixed on it, although there's not many, with the big problem being cinematics not playing.
Quoting: GuestQuoting: AussieEeveeIs anyone actually asking for ports though? It takes a lot less development time and energy to support the game through Proton/Lutris/etc than it does to make a native port. Your game does NOT have to be native to be Linux compatible.
Wouldn't be as much of a problem if the game was wrapped up in wine and officially supported in that manner. This is what System Shock does. Still need to know how to properly bundle wine in with it however, and that's under the assumption there aren't any runtime problems.
I do like the idea of bundling it with wine, but they don't even need to do that to release on Steam, as Steam Play integrates wine though proton.
It'd still take a little bit of developer time and energy, of course but far far far less than making a native port.
QuoteWe're very sorry to announce that we won't be porting Backbone to Linux in the near future.'Near future'... Just say it, you're not going to do it 'ever'.
QuoteWe did our best to do it in-house, but it took immeasurable amount of time and effort,Your game is made in Unreal Engine 4... was there really no one in your entire team who possesses the ability to handle installing Linux on a PC, downloading and compiling UE4 for Linux following a youtube tutorial to do so, then building your game on it?
Quoteand making it work properly would require creating a dev environment to work in... Yes.. that's generally how game development works.. ?...
Quotewhich we don't have the resources for because we're deep in production for our next game.You don't have the resources to dual boot a PC you already own with a free OS?
QuoteWe are not in the financial position to hire another party to do the porting for us.Not sure why you wouldn't be in a financial position to do so given you ran a kickstarter specifically to raise funding to do exactly what you're saying you don't have the finances to do.
QuoteWe absolutely understand the frustration these news might bring, and we're ready to offer you these solutions:HA-HA-HA.
In summary: "We promised a Linux version just to get a bunch more folks to support our kickstarter to effectively use those people as an interest free loan. Now we've made the game and sold enough copies to repay that loan, we're willing to offer refunds."
Seriously, people, stop funding kickstarters. Just stop doing it. It's even worse than pre ordering a game. There have been maybe a handful of game kickstarter projects that haven't ended up producing a completely rubbish outcome.
Last edited by gradyvuckovic on 10 February 2022 at 11:00 am UTC
Quoting: CorbenOr just wait until Valve has re-encoded the videos, like they already did for many others (Exo One).
The problem with that plan is that there are also games for which it never seems to happen.
Quoting: AussieEeveeIs anyone actually asking for ports though? It takes a lot less development time and energy to support the game through Proton/Lutris/etc than it does to make a native port. Your game does NOT have to be native to be Linux compatible.
Yes, it does.
I don't play lazy-arse "compatibility layer suported" games.
I use my money to invest in GNU/Linux native gaming.
The faster we kill Microsoft, the better use of computer resources we will have in the future.
Windows gaming only exists because they hold the largest share of the market, but Windows should be droped by everyone ASAP.
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In regards to the company's move, as someone said here, they took an interest free loan from GNU/Linux users. We are also a more envolved community, so they also beneffited from free mouth-to-mouth advertisement from us fools.
Quoting: gradyvuckovicSeriously, people, stop funding kickstarters. Just stop doing it. It's even worse than pre ordering a game. There have been maybe a handful of game kickstarter projects that haven't ended up producing a completely rubbish outcome.
Idontknow. Many good Linux ports came from Kickstarter projects.
But then they released Backbone, no Linux version was available and they even removed the Linux build for the Prologue. I haven't redeemed by Steam key, waiting for the Linux release first. Guess I'll be asking for a refund.
This is why I don't kickstart anymore; I'll wishlist and open my wallet when the product actually exists.
Quoting: Lambidaif you are waiting for the day when native linux gaming is a thing, it'll never happen. We get a few native games but there will never be a day when all games are native.Quoting: AussieEeveeIs anyone actually asking for ports though? It takes a lot less development time and energy to support the game through Proton/Lutris/etc than it does to make a native port. Your game does NOT have to be native to be Linux compatible.
Yes, it does.
I don't play lazy-arse "compatibility layer suported" games.
I use my money to invest in GNU/Linux native gaming.
The faster we kill Microsoft, the better use of computer resources we will have in the future.
Windows gaming only exists because they hold the largest share of the market, but Windows should be droped by everyone ASAP.
-----
In regards to the company's move, as someone said here, they took an interest free loan from GNU/Linux users. We are also a more envolved community, so they also beneffited from free mouth-to-mouth advertisement from us fools.
and i'm okay with that. the goal isn't to kill Microsoft. The goal is to have a pleasant and playable alternate gaming pc platform. Thats what Proton does.
Quoting: Guesti don't have an answer to the support question, but i do think tweaking the games to fix wine compatibility issues is the way to go.Quoting: AussieEeveeQuoting: GuestQuoting: AussieEeveeIs anyone actually asking for ports though? It takes a lot less development time and energy to support the game through Proton/Lutris/etc than it does to make a native port. Your game does NOT have to be native to be Linux compatible.
Wouldn't be as much of a problem if the game was wrapped up in wine and officially supported in that manner. This is what System Shock does. Still need to know how to properly bundle wine in with it however, and that's under the assumption there aren't any runtime problems.
I do like the idea of bundling it with wine, but they don't even need to do that to release on Steam, as Steam Play integrates wine though proton.
It'd still take a little bit of developer time and energy, of course but far far far less than making a native port.
In that case, Valve is shouldering the support burden, but having such support outside the control of a developer isn't always a good idea. Basically if it doesn't work then customers are more likely to blame the developer rather than Valve, and that's not a desirable situation for the developer.
Also, not everybody buys their games through Steam, and companies might actually want to offer games outside of Steam (GOG, itch.io, direct sales, etc). The more direct to the developer, the better - particularly for small indie devs.
End of the day, support is the keyword.
i also hope other game stores adopt proton, which would solve your other note.
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