People won't be asking for games to work that already work. The posting will inherently be biased towards games people are hoping to play that don't work.
One has to add that proton is actually pretty painless too.
With wine a gold status could mean it only works on that one specific setup, not possible on Debian but just arch based systems when you compile that one specific wine version with these 3 patches. But the game would still crash if you alt+tab out one time to often.
On proton I had a surprisingly well experience so far. Most games that didn't just work for me were unity bullshit either way.
I don't disagree, but it's important context to note that
a) if something is gold in this context, presumably this means that any fixes that need to be applied will be applied by proton, and the process will be opaque as far as the end-user is concerned
b) needing to apply fixes is not exclusively a "get it to play on linux" thing; I have many store-bought windows games that require fixes (often unofficial) in order to actually get them to play on windows.
Considering that the Steam library is > 80% Unity asset flip shovelware, it's hard to figure out what this means in reality.
A better metric would be how many of the top 50 games worldwide run on Linux (including console exclusives). That would be a good universal metric that could be used to compare not just compatibility, but also porting efforts.
12 comments
[ 2.6 ms ] story [ 36.9 ms ] threadAccording to the article:
> 80% of the top 100 games on Steam now have gold or better ratings [in the Proton DB].
> If you are confused about the various ratings, here’s what it means:
> Native: Game is available on Linux natively
> Platinum: Runs perfectly out of the box
> Gold: Runs perfectly after tweaks
So, not all 80% are either native or supported. Still cool though. I look forward to no longer needing Windows. Options are good.
With wine a gold status could mean it only works on that one specific setup, not possible on Debian but just arch based systems when you compile that one specific wine version with these 3 patches. But the game would still crash if you alt+tab out one time to often.
On proton I had a surprisingly well experience so far. Most games that didn't just work for me were unity bullshit either way.
a) if something is gold in this context, presumably this means that any fixes that need to be applied will be applied by proton, and the process will be opaque as far as the end-user is concerned
b) needing to apply fixes is not exclusively a "get it to play on linux" thing; I have many store-bought windows games that require fixes (often unofficial) in order to actually get them to play on windows.
A better metric would be how many of the top 50 games worldwide run on Linux (including console exclusives). That would be a good universal metric that could be used to compare not just compatibility, but also porting efforts.
58% of the top 100 are "generally playable" with minor issues.