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Latest Comments by g000h
The 'Humble Freedom Bundle' is huge and well worth picking up
15 February 2017 at 12:05 am UTC

Quoting: M@yeulCWoops, I screwed hard on this one. I wanted to get back home and use my Linux PC to redeem the keys (Linux purchase and such), then realized that games that I wanted were gone from the bundle (No time to explain and nuclear throne -- maybe subnautica if I have a vive in the future and it get ported to Linux. Strike that. Every game I missed. I'm up for a trade with someone else on these (against key from other bundles I might not have redeemed)).
But what's heartbreaking is that, as I rushed to press purchase (greedy reflexes), I forgot to customize my split :/

Don't do the same mistake as me, but be aware that their steam keys seem to be in limited supplies. I don't know what it means for the game that "may" come soon.

Hi, Subnautica and Super Meat Boy are 'gone', but Nuclear Throne and the rest are still there. Super Meat Boy is often on sale, so you can pick that up cheaper some other time. Grab the bundle now ;)

The 'Humble Freedom Bundle' is huge and well worth picking up
14 February 2017 at 12:05 am UTC Likes: 1

I've taken advantage of the fantastic bundle myself. However "I did it my way..."

Contacted a friend who I'm connected to on Steam, so I know everything they own. Cross-checked the games that we already own in the bundle. Suggested to them that we both split the bundle. He gets all the Windows games, I get the Linux games, and any games I already own he gets, and vice versa.

When finally coming to an agreement, I suggested to my friend that they send me a Gift Link for the current Humble Subscription (Total War: Warhammer + others) ($12) while I buy the Freedom bundle ($30) and gift 16 of the games to the friend. Note that I *already* owned 9 of the 16 games. The remaining 7 were for Windows (which I didn't want).

Another win-win situation ;)

'The Dweller' is a short and minimalistic but incredibly fun and solid puzzler that I highly recommend
12 February 2017 at 2:13 pm UTC

Yeah, I spotted it would probably be quite entertaining and grabbed it when it was on sale 4 months ago. In fact, you can quite often buy lots of hidden gems like this for very low cost. Then you have decent and varied entertainment playing a few hours of each one, rather than buying a single blockbuster for £20+.

Also, there is the support of Linux gaming. Snap up 10-20 of these, each runs on Linux and each counts as a Linux game purchase, versus buying one blockbuster.

A few cheap recommendations from me: Bit Blaster XL (39p now on Steam), Ichi (not on sale now), Void Invaders (not on sale now).

Into The Breach, the new strategy game from the makers of FTL will be on Linux
11 February 2017 at 4:23 am UTC Likes: 1

Quoting: GuestBought FTL for my pc and iOS. So worth the money :)
Looking forward to some reviews on this one.

Instabuy for me if they ever put it on Android.

Friday Livestream at 6 PM UTC!
10 February 2017 at 9:40 pm UTC

Watched a bit. Wraiths versus Marksmen - hehe.

HITMAN for Linux officially announced, port by Feral Interactive and arriving this month
10 February 2017 at 9:37 pm UTC

While on that subject, I'm also quite particular about buying "games for Linux". Basically, in order for me to buy a game it has got to be good, something I like, and available on Linux. I break these conditions rarely. If the game is exceptional, only available on Windows, and vastly reduced in a sale, then I'll get it on Windows. Probably the most appealing couple of games to me are Witcher 3 and TES: Skyrim (well, Doom too,but... heh, I bought it already). Skyrim I bought as well but very reduced in a sale. Witcher 3 - holding out for very cheap or ported to Linux (instabuy).

Into The Breach, the new strategy game from the makers of FTL will be on Linux
10 February 2017 at 9:27 pm UTC Likes: 1

FTL is one of my favourite games. I've put probably 150 hours into playing it. Own it on GOG *and* Steam. I enjoy the fun of just playing a random adventure. The completion of the achievements in order to earn new ships, and then have a go at piloting them, are all things which make it very replayable for me. The game play is very well crafted. It is also great for small spurts of play. Play for 10 minutes, save the game, quit out, return later and continue from where you'd reached.

Watching news about the new game with interest.

HITMAN for Linux officially announced, port by Feral Interactive and arriving this month
9 February 2017 at 2:19 pm UTC Likes: 1

Quoting: GuestI would also prefer if Feral and others (Aspyr, Croteam…) made DRM-free releases on DRM-free platforms, because with Steam a tiny change by Valve can mean I don’t have access to my games anymore. Tomb Raider stopped working here, but I have no idea if it’s because of a game update (that are impossible to prevent with Steam), a Steam client update, or a system update. And that’s only one game but if the Steam client completely stops working then it’s bye bye to hundreds of games I paid for.

The positive thing about Steam is I can get a refund if the game doesn’t work or I don’t like it…

Well, there are quite a few other positives with Steam. But I wholeheartedly agree with you - I prefer it when a game has DRM-free option as well as a Steam option.

Often when Humble Bundle sell games, (often Indie titles) they share a DRM-free download link for the game AS WELL AS a Steam key - the best of both worlds.

HumbleBundle <3

The Dark Mod, the free stealth game inspired by Thief is looking to get on Steam
9 February 2017 at 2:04 pm UTC Likes: 1

With these various 'currently free' games coming to Steam, e.g. The Dark Mod, QueToo, maybe others - I hope two things continue:

1) The game stays a free game.
2) The game is still available as a non-Steam DRM-free installer package (for people who prefer not to use Steam).

Fair enough if you monetise a brand new game, but taking an already-free game and then converting it to a paid-for game is "not on"

GOG is having a weekly retro sale with six titles from the late 80's and 90's with Linux support
8 February 2017 at 1:13 pm UTC

Quoting: HexDSLThe original Strife game is bloody brilliant! it took the early id Software engine and added baseic rpg elements to it. theres still a lot of shooting and running but the depth of story really adds to it.

if you do pick it up then take the time to explore, the story only takes you though about 70% of the total game world, there is so much stuff off the beaten path! - well worth the money!

Just wanted to check with you - The Original Strife : Veteran Edition - updated with high-res textures in 2014 - Is that a Native Linux port? Or is it a Wine Wrapper or Dosbox release?

Also, are you playing the GOG or Steam version of this, yourself? (Thanks)