Leftovers: Games
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Valve Games On AMD Foss Drivers
Hey Linux gamers, got some good news for the AMD users . It’s pretty common knowledge Nvidia users get some good drivers at the trade-off of binary blob drivers (or not, depending on your ethics) and that AMD are often left in the dust, but how can open source drivers change that?
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Planetary Annihilation Now In Gamma Phase With Major Patch, New GOL Video For You
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Door Kickers Squad-Based Strategy Releases Alpha 9
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February 2014 Steam Hardware Survey Shows Linux At 1.3%
According to the latest figures published by Valve for their "Steam Hardware Survey", they put the percent of Linux gamers on Steam at 1.30%.
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Many Linux Games To Look Forward To In 2014
So Linux has a lot of games now, with plenty more still to come this year as it's early days yet, but I have decided to list a few you really need to keep an eye on. Since we post so much news nowadays I feel that it is a good time to reflect on what we have still yet to come, so you don't get lost in a sea of Linux games.
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GOL Cast: Catching Phantoms And Poltergeists In GhostControl Inc.
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Nothing To Hide, A Game Of Anti-Stealth & It's Open Source
I have tested the game and it runs really well on Manjaro, it's very odd, but the premise is really funny. I love how it all looks like status updates on a social networking site.
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Shadowrun: Dragonfall now available on PC, Mac and Linux
Shadowrun Returns today receives its first full-length campaign expansion with Shadowrun: Dragonfall from developer Harebrained Schemes. A 12+ hour campaign set in the city of Berlin awaits with new features.
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Portal 2 released for Linux
Today, a beta version of Portal 2, one of the most successful game titles poduced by Valve and generally one of the most successful computer games, has been released for Linux. While the first Portal has been available on Linux for a year now, Valve was working on other titles for Linux, like Left 4 Dead 2, Dota 2 or the new game consoles “Steam machines”, before releasing Portal 2 for Linux.
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Cricket Audio now available for Linux
Cricket Audio allows app developers to quickly add sound to their apps with just a few lines of code. It can play sounds directly from memory with low latency, or stream them from storage media, and is designed specifically for mobile games, with highly optimized code and low, predictable memory usage. It also works on Windows, OS X, and now Linux, so it can be integrated into authoring tools.
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Dilution and Misuse of the "Linux" Brand
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