Such a good piece of software.
Games
Welcome to the largest gaming community on Lemmy! Discussion for all kinds of games. Video games, tabletop games, card games etc.
Weekly Threads:
Rules:
-
Submissions have to be related to games
-
No bigotry or harassment, be civil
-
No excessive self-promotion
-
Stay on-topic; no memes, funny videos, giveaways, reposts, or low-effort posts
-
Mark Spoilers and NSFW
-
No linking to piracy
More information about the community rules can be found here and here.
And a wonderfully dedicated developer - dedicated to Linux and FOSS itself as an idea, which is something I think fewer celebrate than should.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Thanks so much for sharing! I've recently moved to daily driving Linux and went Bazzite for the gaming element (which I've since only somewhat used, lol).
Haven't dove into the bits and pieces that really make the games work much yet, had no idea Lutris was all this! Particularly the wider library management / enablement, the very thing the dev called out as not well known lol.
AND I was very happy to find out it's all Python! That's my bread and butter (and it's delicious), I may just have to do a wee bit of dev'in someday too. If I ever get around to the games lol
AND I was very happy to find out it’s all Python! That’s my bread and butter (and it’s delicious)
I keep telling the developer of Junk Store that Python is the bee's knees, but since he is neck-deep in common lisp these days he keeps dismissing my adoration of Python!
I'm so glad you enjoyed this, you're the exact user this kind of thing I try arrange is for! And welcome to daily driving Linux, I do hope you settle in and stick around for the long haul :)
I'll make sure Mathieu sees your happy comment here, again, so happy you enjoyed this!!!
I just bought two oldish business class Dell laptops this last week and put Bazzite on em both, for the fam. Easing out our Chromebooks we've used for minor things, just can't abide a machine that won't let me actually own it anymore, with the way the world's going.
Not exactly revolutionary lol, but your enthusiasm demanded something in response, so I wanted to let you know that we (and I bet lots of others!) are all in. And I really hope you keep doing stuff like this!!
If I haven't contributed something to Lutris by this year's Hacktoberfest, by golly I'm committing (heh) to putting an open issue to rest during best month.
Cheers and thanks again!!
Just wanted to say that it's always a highlight of my day reading these :)
Well this is just the kindest comment I could hope for!!
Thank you! More to come, but first another News Post will be next, I'd say :)
What the fuck? The logo is an otter? I thought it was a cowboy!
I've always thought it was an otter, but never up till now have I questioned why it's stolen an orange. They're not the most citrus-loving of creatures.
I mean it's in the name, Lutris. I am trying really hard to see a cowboy now though.
The orange is a face, the white is hair, and the brown is a big cowboy hat.
That doesn’t even make sense. What cowboy hat wraps around to the chin?
We need more people like PerfectDark. Great post upong great post, keep em coming 🫶
Thank you, sips :)
No plans on stopping, so you're all stuck with me now!
This post is already one of the crown jewels of lemmy. Great questions, great answers, and great formatting! Thank you!
Great interview; Love Lutris :)
Another fantastic project that makes gaming on Linux so much easier. It's incredibly strong in configurability and 'robustness'. Yes, you might have to set up all of your Wine bottles and things like that, which can be a faff, but once it's working in Lutris, it just keeps on working on Lutris.
Great for long-running series, too. I've been a big fan of the XCOM series since the Amiga days; in Lutris, it's easy to have UFO: Enemy Unknown / Terror from the Deep running in openxcom
, Apocalypse in DosBox, and connected up to the Firaxis remakes in Steam. Similarly, love me a metroidvania, and have got most of the 40+ CastleVania games lined up and ready-to-go, just a double-click away.
I love your posts! You always make quality content, thank you so much! 😊
Thanks for another great post and a very interesting interview! FWIW I cross-posted it to !linux_gaming@lemmy.world
Oh thank you so much for doing that!
Any way more people get the chance to see it is a good one, I really appreciate you doing that! :)
Thank you for this! :D
Lovely interview.
Lutris got Magic: Arena working for me on my Linux machine a few years back and gave me a very enjoyable card game grind for about 3 years until I stayed limiting MtG:A to my phone on the commute.
Amazing work both from the Lutris team, and the interviewer.
I feel like an idiot but I don't understand what I github is and how I am suppose to use it.
Github is a platform to upload your code to using git (a source code versioning system that allows you to store different versions of your program code, history of all changes to it, etc., and to collaborate with other people to work on the same project with each person working on their own part and then merging the changes together). You can check other people’s projects, upload yours, leave comments, create issue reports, copy others’ work and make a “fork” of the software, and much more. Among other things you can download the latest releases of the software provided by the developers, usually installation instructions are provided on the project page, and the latest releases can be found under the Releases tab.
GitHub was really intimidating for me the first few times I used it. Overly simple answer is that it's a place to store and share code, and oftentimes versions that are compiled and ready to install. If you want to keep things simple just look for a "Releases" section
I'm one of those who have 10 or less games installed, because having more would only be detrimental to my experience. I'd be unable to choose and then I'd play even less than I already do lately.
P.S.: Thank you for the interview, very interesting.
Thanks for the original content! Clicked as a current Lutris user.
@PerfectDark@lemmy.world The content you have produced the last 2 months has been incredible honestly. Fun fact, I've subscribed to your weekly lemmy rss feed on Calibre so that I can read your gaming news on my Kobo, which works very well. Your posts look nice on "paper". Thank you for posting these to the open web and for the great content. Is there any way to support your work by chance?
Oh my gosh this is lovely to hear!
I never would have connected those 'dots' of using Calibre to send them to the ereader. I LOVE Calibre, I've used it forever and I can't even imagine anyone owning any ereader device without using it. I just loved reading this!
And I'm so glad to hear you enjoyed this Q&A and my posts. That makes me happy! While I appreciate your offer, I just do these to make me happy. I love writing them up, I love trawling through gaming bits and pieces to find interesting things to share, so I'm just endlessly lucky people actually want to read them!
The only thing you could do is share the posts with others, if you've the inclination! I think the more who end up on Lemmy, Mastodon or otherwise - the better we'll all be :)
Thank you again, this was the sweetest!