The Witcher 3 got bumped up from Playable to Verified for the Steam Deck around the initial Deck release, and developer CD Projekt RED has released a statement on it now.
A game that was supposed to gain official SteamOS support back when the original Steam Machines released, with Valve showing a huge splash image on the Steam homepage to announce it coming. It was quickly removed, which Valve and CDPR stayed silent on afterwards. How things change huh?
In the announcement the developer said they're "working closely with Valve on the compatibility and performance aspects of our games on the Steam Deck. The goal is to provide the best possible Witcher 3 and Cyberpunk 2077 experience on this platform, while keeping in mind its unique hardware characteristics" and they also said not to expect any updates for their "legacy" titles like the original Witcher game.
Here's a video of it running on Steam Deck:
Direct Link
Nice to know more developers are paying attention now. Let's hope this continues for a very long time.
When someone raised the Russia ban issue in this thread I kept reading the comments fully expecting that the whole thing would go downhill...
...but actually this is maybe the least tinfoilhat-ish exchange I've seen in several years regarding such heavy and controverted subjects, plus somehow it stayed reasonably on-topic throughout!
Who are you people, and what have you done to the internet?! :D
Quoting: constI own witcher 2+3 and never really played them. Certainly looking forward to try them again on my deck (just finished the real order *yay*)
Can I just start with witcher3 or should I go back to Witcher1 and walk through the series?
Anyway, very reassuring that CDPR is actually committed. Guess I'll go out of my way and order cyberpunk on next sale :D
If you have time (1 and 2 are "shorter" than 3), I suggest you walk through the series again.
There are a lot of references in each games about things that happened in the previous games, and I like how you can carry on from the save of the last game to the next one, keeping your equipment and part of your inventory, too.
Like, if Geralt is a traveller, he surely would have some possessions when going to a new location, right ?
Spoiler, click me
I also loved the fact that, in Witcher 3, you get all your money from the previous game, but you have to wait a certain point in story to be able to use it... Cleverly integrated in the lore of the game, and of course preventing being overpowered too early in the game, while rewarding you from playing through the series
Quoting: MarlockWho are you people, and what have you done to the internet?! :D
This is one of those few occasions where the community is actually halfway decent. I've seen far worse, I just trawled though a few pages of comments on that steam announcement, and it's full of Russian speakers lashing out at people.
I guess we just care more about the games and linux and stuff, and there aren't too many ideologues here yet (unless you count free software and open source) so things are relatively calm. Also people here don't tend to be immature and jump to being abusive towards others.
It is nice to see.
What's also nice to see is CDPR showing some respect for a linux platform, finally. After the Witcher 3 release stuff, I'd given up hope. Then it started working under wine/vkd3d, and Cyberpunk worked fairly well straight out of the gate. Different times indeed.
Quoting: ShmerlQuoting: soulsourceTo be honest, I am a bit worried. Where I live (Austria) the politicians in charge are currently considering to ban Russian media. While I don't think that anything of value will be lost in this particular case, it's a slippery slope...
There must be some border line there. To give a more historically felt through example (especially for Austria), imagine there is some Himmler Media Co. running in your country. Does it deserve a ban?
In general it is of course the issue of where free speech ends and problems begin.
That's true. It also speaks for itself that only one political party is opposed to the ban - the one that's known to have close ties to neo-Nazi organizations and has a rather recent corruption scandal involving a (fake) niece of a Russian oligarch with dirty toes...
(The other opposition parties, that voted for the ban, did voice concern though.)
Quoting: constor should I go back to Witcher1 and walk through the series?Absolutely! Every game is good in its own way.
Witcher 1 is a very atmospheric game.
Quoting: SirBubblesit's full of Russian speakers lashing out at people.
Russians do not blame people. They express their opinion against CDPR and that's it.
There are a lot of questions to these companies, and yesterday there were questions to Sony, which robbed Russians and retailers.
Quoting: SirBubblesWhat's also nice to see is CDPR showing some respect for a linux platform, finally.
Stop deceiving yourself and others. CDPR does not support Linux.
7 years ago, for the sake of PR, they hung out a banner with "the upcoming SteamOS version of the game", and today they brag about "oh, look, Witcher 3 works on Linux!!!". Although they didn't do anything for it at all.
Stop giving them the fourth, fifth, sixth (or whatever it is?) chance. They have long shown their face and their attitude to Linux.
Quoting: mphuZCDPR does not support Linux.
They support it in the sense they have not done anything terrible to their Galaxy 2.0 launcher (like baking it against .NET stuff) and also they do support Linux with a easy script packaging system for developers. You can also select Linux as a platform on their website.
All in all they are second to Steam when it comes to Linux support. OR 3rd when you factor in Itch store.
Really all CDPR need to do is release their launcher as semi-open-source on github or something and allow Linux users to compile it for Linux. (and add in Linux/Mac as install options, and probably proton detection)
Last edited by TheRiddick on 15 March 2022 at 12:16 pm UTC
Quoting: melkemindAfter all, a lot of the people who make the propaganda are just regular people too, not cunning masterminds who brainwash the masses.
Don’t sell propaganda short. The people that *actually* make up the propaganda (the ones who comes up with it and oversee it) are (in the modern era) often very competent psychologist of some kind or another. In older times, the propagandists were often very eloquent and charismatic people. In the west, this psychology of influencing people and/or the masses has been leveraged to create the field consumer physiology, in order to get people to buy shit they didn’t need.
Just look at the resources nazi Germany put into their propaganda machine, or how the Russian government invested in their cyber-misinformation program, or the western (especially US) companies invested heavily in consumer psychology and propaganda to further their economic interests at the expense of the legitimate interests of the people (e.g. the idea that privatization is the cure for everything).
It’s “regular people” in the same sense that it’s “regular people” who designed and built the Curiosity rover.
Last edited by Appelsin on 15 March 2022 at 12:28 pm UTC
Quoting: rustybroomhandleWow, the comments on that announcement seem to be 90% Russians yelling about nazis and calling CDPR "traitors" and stuff.
Yes a polish studio traitors to Russia wow geography is not racists strong points is it. I ve seen those comments Jesus state owned media in Russia is really pushing that nazi thing a lot
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