Or increased support for the Steam Proton at least.
Or increased support for the Steam Proton at least.
Probably not officially. Even the "official" Mac client is just a half-baked Wine wrapper, and not really even a good one. Getting a current version of Wine (with dxvk if possible) is still your best shot for native or near-native performance on not-Windows.
As unlikely as it seems, I'm holding out hope for a native Linux client. MMORPGs are the only reason, I have Windows.
Unlikely to ever happen, given the nature of Linux (fragmented and extremely poor GPU support) and the fragmented nature of Wine (Which includes the wrapper used by the Mac version of FFXIV.)
I know it's a joke at this point, but nobody plays games on a Linux machine. Android doesn't count because it's not a "Linux OS" it's a proprietary OS running a Linux kernel and some OSS to not reinvent tools that are common on to all *nix systems like OSX. People play games on Mac's but Apple's complete ignorance of the gaming community kinda puts it in this wacky position of being able to play more games than Linux, but less games than it's Mobile fork iOS. Even though ALL those games have to compile and can compile on MacOS.
People who play games on Linux, do so because they have a political knife to sharpen against Microsoft and little else, thus many of those who ask for Linux support can't even point to a Linux distribution that will run existing games with Linux ports of of the box. Even Steam appears to have abandoned it's SteamOS based on Debian, with more than half of the issues still open. That's why developers don't take Linux development as a first-class citizen seriously. Some software developers release a "Linux" version that only works on one flavor of Linux, that which Steam supports (Debian) and if you don't know how to launch Steam on Linux, you aren't going to get those games on any other flavor without jumping through a lot of hoops.
Given the propensity of people to gnash their teeth at even the easiest of technical support questions, it's generally considered that Linux ports of software are "unsupported" and "use at your own risk" since the developers can not test on every distribution or fork of that distribution and may only test on their one linux machine in the office.
You will not likely get direct support from SE at the moment since they can barely make the Windows client work properly. You can get the DX9 and DX11 client working on Linux with some workarounds, but it is not great. Also if you are raider that requires certain software for raids, it is incompatible with Wine. So Windows only for raiders for now.
For your other games, there is Steam Proton.
https://steamcommunity.com/games/221...55855739350561
Here is the Github for Steam Proton.
https://github.com/ValveSoftware/Proton
This community website lists game compatibility with Proton.
https://www.protondb.com/
There is also a community called Lutris which can make playing games on Linux a bit easier if a game is not supported by Steam Proton. You can play games like Overwatch and WoW with this.
https://lutris.net/
There is also a subreddit for Linux gaming at https://www.reddit.com/r/linux_gaming/
Last edited by lulunami; 10-30-2018 at 06:56 AM.
Fried popoto enthusiast.
Don't have to support every distro,just the major ones like Ubuntu through Steam and the Linux community will figure out the rest.
Do you mean current AAA games? Because there are plenty of older titles like the Borderlands series, Civ 5,Dota 2,indie games which run on Linux through Steam.I know it's a joke at this point, but nobody plays games on a Linux machine...
People who play games on Linux, do so because they have a political knife to sharpen against Microsoft and little else, thus many of those who ask for Linux support can't even point to a Linux distribution that will run existing games with Linux ports of of the box. Even Steam appears to have abandoned it's SteamOS based on Debian, with more than half of the issues still open.
I think Windows 7,8.1 and 10 are pretty good OSes. However, my experience with Linux has been better in terms of leanness,system stability and control.
Again that's fine, they don't have to test on every distro.Go with Debian/Ubuntu.Steam is easily installed in popular distros through their respective software centres/package managers. It really is not "jumping through a lot of hoops" from that point to get it working on others for the Linux community.That's why developers don't take Linux development as a first-class citizen seriously. Some software developers release a "Linux" version that only works on one flavor of Linux, that which Steam supports (Debian) and if you don't know how to launch Steam on Linux, you aren't going to get those games on any other flavor without jumping through a lot of hoops.
...since the developers can not test on every distribution or fork of that distribution and may only test on their one linux machine in the office.
I don't think SE will ever do a native Linux client simply because of OS market share but it would be a nice gesture and 1 less reason to keep Windows.
Last edited by TwistedTea; 10-30-2018 at 11:54 AM.
Tell ya what, organize the destruction of Microsoft and push Linux hard in the subsequent vacuum. You'll have to figure out which version to push and knock apple out too probably but after the dust settles, their may be a Linux OS people use in enough numbers to justify native linux support. Probably not, something else more than likely would come about, but hey, there's a chance.
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