The Maxwell bug in the LoG 1 linux version was fixed in July.afettouhi wrote:So the linux version of LoG 1 is unmaintained ATM or has the one fixing Maxwell bug taken over maintaining LoG 1?Dr.Disaster wrote:Hard to tell. Unless Steam Machines manage to push Linux a LOT up as "Popular OS" in Steam's Hardware Survey (current rating: 0.94%) and at least near or past OS X' current 3.23% i would not consider it worth the investment. Also as AH experienced this year an external port can be risky when new bugs emerge due to new hardware/software features; it took months to find somebody able to fix the Maxwell issue for LoG 1 on Linux.afettouhi wrote:Any plans on making LoG 2 available on SteamOS/Linux now that the first Steam Machines are coming out in a few weeks?
Now who actually made that fix (petri or someone else) and how future support of LoG 1 linux will be handled only AH can answer.
Wrong question.afettouhi wrote:But would you be interested in and external Linux port if the porter was willing to support it afterwards?
In regard of LoG1 the original external porter did support his work until 1.3.7 became the general stable release in early 2013.
Now when the Maxwell bug came up this year he suddenly refused further help which took AH months to resolve.
So the correct question is: will i buy a product with an unclear support situation?
And the answer is No.
IMO this is a requirement for a product, not just games and Linux but for any software on an OS. There is no point in buying/supporting a product or company when there is no guaranteed support, at least for the hardware and OS the product was once made for.
To give an example of how not to do it: over the last two years i experienced a rather bad example in that matter. In December 2013 me and some pals purchased multiple copies of a back then new game on Steam for the annual Lan party. It was advertised to run on WinXP and up and on hardware similar to LoG1 specs a.k.a. pretty moderate. Now during these two years the developer made and published DLC's to add more content. While it is nice to get more out of the same game the developer took the freedom to both silently raise the requirements (not that bad) and cut support for WinXP plus a lot of previously supported hardware (pretty bad). These changes effected all players since they came along as patches and if you want to team up in multiplayer (DLC or not) everyone has to run the same game version. In fact this ment that even players who did upgrade their systems from WinXP to i.e. Win7 could no longer run the game because their system hardware was no longer supported, literally preventing people to play a game they once paid for. Due to this i will now think twice about purchasing another product from this developer.