About half of games with anticheat work on Linux: https://areweanticheatyet.com/
About half of games with anticheat work on Linux: https://areweanticheatyet.com/
Just because your experience has been perfect does not mean mine and other people’s been.
That’s why I linked to ProtonDB, where the vast majority of people have a perfect experience out of the box.
Sounds like you’re the only one.. I’ve played several hours of Lethal Company, and it’s ran perfectly.
It’s much faster.
Most of those were preexisting contracts they needed to fulfill. You’re the one who’s arguing in bad faith.
Astroturfing is a very real thing that major companies participate in to sway public sentiment.
Games that are Epic exclusive aren’t cheaper either. This is a nonsense argument.
People who have never launched the game aren’t counted in these statistics.
This smells like desperation.
I said “generally.” There are a few publishers that ship empty discs, and some games that are completely broken without a day-one patch, but most still have a playable game on the disc, at least on PlayStation. On Xbox, for games that have backwards compatibility with One, they often couldn’t fit both game builds on one disc, so they made one version download-only instead of shipping two discs.
For PC games, no, they’re not actually on the disc. For console games, they generally are the full game, albeit sometimes buggy without the day-one patch.
This is making perfect the enemy of good. What’s actually going to happen is people are going to use “password123” because they can remember it.
Same here in every point, except my wife’s work computer is Windows 10, not 11.
https://partner.steamgames.com/ says there are 132 million monthly active Steam users, so that’s more like 2.5 million Linux users on Steam.