Did you read the article? It’s talking primarily about how this could be really good for consumers.
Did you read the article? It’s talking primarily about how this could be really good for consumers.
Yeah I agree with you here. A lot of Trackmania players are annoyed by Trackmania’s $20 a year subscription and have called to make it F2P with cosmetic microtransactions, but I’m pretty happy that hasn’t happened. There isn’t even any DLC. It is really nice to see not have to see ads to pay more money for stuff.
Hm, maybe A?
Age of Empires
Anno
Assassin’s Creed
Aloft
Against the Storm
Across the Obelisk
Hm, E would be a good option as well
Elden Ring
Elder Scrolls
Europa Universalis
Endless (Space, Legend)
As a side note, would “Sid Meier’s Civilization V” count as “s” or “c”?
In 2027 the current iteration won’t be legally able to be sold in the EU, since the EU will require portable devices to have easily replaceable batteries. (Which the Steam does not qualify for due to needing a heat gun). So an upgrade is almost certainly planned by then.
Programming languages is way too broad a category. There’s a lot of variation in both power and difficulty.
I think there’s a difference when the source material isn’t great. IIRC Forest Gump is another example.
Oh yeah, to be clear I don’t think Macs can’t be good gaming machines, it’s just that it doesn’t seem to be heading that way right now.
Windows has one major thing going for it: it’s best-in-class for gaming. It might even be the greatest gaming platform of all time. Linux and even Mac are gaining ground, but they’ve got a little ways to go.
…is Mac gaming actually gaining ground? From listening to a friend of mine who has a Mac, it sounds like Mac gaming is going steadily backwards. Wine and similar doesn’t work very well for them, and Mac compatibility is happening with fewer and fewer games. Game Porting Toolkit isn’t really for end users, is it? Is there something else my friend is missing?
Hm, what didn’t you enjoy about Elden Ring? I started with Sekiro, finished it, and have moved on to Elden Ring (in co-op tho). I have very much enjoyed both.
That said, Valve does not support the official Ubuntu way of installing Steam, which is via snap (‘apt install steam’ will install the snap). So you have to make sure to install the Steam way (manually via the deb) instead.
Yeah, Wine is very strict about this; IIRC if you’ve ever even looked at the leaked Windows XP source code, you’re not allowed to work on Wine.
Sounds like a “temporary” error message.
It’s a very strange place to go on fire! A fire? At a Sea Parks? It’s been racking my head!
Just to let people know, this is a 6 year old article. Not saying it isn’t relevant, but the market of course continues to move over time.
Diversity is a huge strength of Linux. We should encourage users to use whatever works for them.
Yeah this is a big part why I’m very skeptical of Signal. It feels a lot like Ubuntu’s snap store, it’s technically open but you can’t really interact with the main corporate controlled ecosystem.