An in-depth guide for running Windows games on Linux Table of Contents Introduction Status of Linux Gaming Note on NTFS File Systems Double check your Nvid...
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How to install Fallout London on Steam On Linux
I spent 3 days trying to get FOLON to work following both the official website guide and every post I could find on the internet, and I finally said fuck it and played around with it myself and figured out how to get it running.
I'm posting here in case anyone else has had the same problems I did and don't have a solution. The first half is pretty much identical to their instructions
This does not use the FOLON Downgrader, Because I dont like the idea of signing into my steam account through someone elses program.
Also don't be in a steam beta. Use release steam
- Run steam in console mode as per instructions here. On Linux just close steam and run "steam -console" in terminal
- Download all the depot packs like they instruct.
- Create a folder elsewhere and go to where the files downloaded and empty each folder into the created folder so you have a full build of the last version of Fallout 4 (Do not alter this directory further, unless you
Everything you need to know about gaming on Linux
Hi everyone, I just finished writing a guide on everything you need to know in order to game on Linux. It covers Proton (Steam play), using Heroic Launcher (with Wine-GE), and all sorts of tidbits and tips I wish people had told me earlier. I hope this can be useful to someone out there!
Archive link: https://web.archive.org/web/20230816141640/https://popcar.bearblog.dev/everything-linux-gaming/
Playing Visual Novels on GNU/Linux
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.comfysnug.space/post/138679
We've been working on a guide to help players on all major GNU/Linux distributions play visual novels for the past few weeks. This guide is designed to be used by both beginners and experts, with minimal need to touch the command line.
openSUSE wins the award for "never had to touch the terminal" and "simplest setup instructions", but Fedora is a close second.
While there are a few existing visual novel guides for GNU/Linux around, we've tried to fill in the gaps we noticed. We've put a lot of research into this guide and ensured it is accurate while remaining simple and approachable.
If you're interested, start here!
We have an extensive Troubleshooting section on our Problems page if you're having trouble getting visual novels to work, too.
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