• woelkchen@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    The cost to maintain “native” ports is too high to make sense for most developers.

    If that was the case, no console ports would exist, except maybe Xbox because Xbox uses modified Windows internally.

    Proton also makes it easier to preserve games since an “native” port would become incompatible overtime without work to adapt the software to changes in the system it’s running.

    Inform yourself what Steam Linux Runtime is before making such comments. You are 100% wrong.

      • proton_lynx@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        How fucking idiot would you have to be to complain about users sending bug reports. Linux users usually send very detailed bug reports, which can uncover bugs that might happen on all platforms.

        • arthur@lemmy.zip
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          6 months ago

          Yes Linux users generate great reports because they care and usually are more knowledgeable.

          But treat the reports cost time and work, and usually this problems will not happen for the majority of their use base.

          So, as the company, you can have 0.1% of your sales generating 20% of extra work that will not benefit 99.9% of the users. It is easier and cheaper to cut that group (us Linux users) instead of support.

    • arthur@lemmy.zip
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      6 months ago

      Inform yourself what Steam Linux Runtime is before making such comments. You are 100% wrong.

      If a game depends on an API and this API gets discontinued, without adaptation it will have problems. That’s true for any software and any system. As a compatibility layer, Proton can keep old games compatible despite the system changes when it translates the API calls that the games depend on to what the base system has to offer. (I’m not talking necessarily of a game running on Steam in this case)

      So, enlighten me, where am I wrong?

      • woelkchen@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        So, enlighten me, where am I wrong?

        So you’re too lazy to read up on Steam Linux Runtimes and expect me to explain it to you? SLR 1.0 Scout keeps full binary compatibility to Ubuntu 12.04, so 12 years already. SLR APIs don’t change. That’s the point. Get a clue.