My Message close
GAME JOBS
Latest Blogs
spacer View All     Post     RSS spacer
 
May 25, 2013
 
Beer and Diversity
 
Selling Games
 
Want To Help Stop Youth Cyberbullying? Let Your Kids Raid More.
 
Tenets of Videodreams, Part 1: Exploration [2]
 
We're Indie, we like Microsoft. Too Controversial? [38]
spacer
Latest Jobs
spacer View All     Post a Job     RSS spacer
 
May 25, 2013
 
Treyarch / Activision
Technical Animator
 
Treyarch / Activision
Game Systems Designer
 
Infinity Ward / Activision
Senior Tools Engineer
 
Airtight Games
Environment Artist
 
App Minis LLC
Senior Unity Game Programmer
 
Gameloft
Game Designer
spacer
Latest Press Releases
spacer View All     RSS spacer
 
May 25, 2013
 
12 Million Downloads
after 1 Year in the
AppStore
 
Global Games Market Grows
6% to $70.4bn in 2013
 
Sharpen Your Battle Axes
and Prepare to
Pillage!...
 
Active Soccer - Indiegogo
campaign
 
Fashion Party Dress Up
Press Release
spacer
About
spacer Editor-In-Chief:
Kris Graft
Blog Director:
Christian Nutt
Senior Contributing Editor:
Brandon Sheffield
News Editors:
Mike Rose, Kris Ligman
Editors-At-Large:
Leigh Alexander, Chris Morris
Advertising:
Jennifer Sulik
Recruitment:
Gina Gross
Education:
Gillian Crowley
 
Contact Gamasutra
 
Report a Problem
 
Submit News
 
Comment Guidelines
Sponsor

 
Valve throws support behind Linux with Steam, ports
Valve throws support behind Linux with Steam, ports
 

July 17, 2012   |   By Eric Caoili

Comments 12 comments

More: Console/PC, Business/Marketing





Valve will bring its digital distribution service Steam to a third PC platform, Linux, appeasing the operating system's relatively small but devoted userbase who've called for a native client for years.

The company formed a new team last year to investigate the possibility of bringing Steam to Linux, and now it has announced that the group is bringing a fully functional client to the platform, along with an optimized version of its first-person shooter Left 4 Dead 2 -- Valve intends to port more existing and upcoming titles to Linux, too.

Linux users have been able to run Steam before using Wine, but an official native client will not have the technical issues that can come with using emulation software, and could attract more users. With the release of the native client, developers will be able to target a new group of gamers not using Windows or Mac systems.

Valve says it's just started working on a version of Steam for Ubuntu, a popular variant of Linux that it believes has recognition with the general gaming and developer communities. Based on the reception of its Ubuntu edition, the company will look into supporting other Linux distributions in the future.

The new team says its Linux Steam client is already running on Ubuntu with all of the service's major features. Valve hopes to make Left 4 Dead 2, the first game it will put out for Ubuntu, perform as well under Linux as it does on Windows. The publisher has not announced a release date for either project.

Valve has launched a blog that will follow the Linux team's progress.
 
 
Top Stories

image
Blog: We're indie, we like Microsoft. So what?
image
Xbox One preowned rumors batter GameStop shares
image
Blog: Theme and craft, games and art
image
Xbox One: A flawed plan, well-executed


   
 
Comments

E Zachary Knight
profile image
Personally, I would have preferred Team Fortress 2 to have been the first game to come to Linux, but this Ubuntu user is pretty happy anyway.

Dustin Mellen
profile image
Agreed. TF2 would seem like the obvious candidate. A F2P launch title to get people started on Steam for Linux.

Chuck Bartholomew
profile image
I'm a little surprised by the choice of launch title as well, but in line with other recent Valve news, they probably solicited feedback from their Linux fans on what games they wanted most.

Michael Rooney
profile image
It seems like if they ported Source to Linux they should just be able to port their entire lineup no?

edit: Maybe L4D2 was just the smallest amount of changes to the source engine required for stability on linux and it would have just been the first game ready anyway, even though they're technically porting the whole engine?

Alex Boccia
profile image
Not too shabby

james sadler
profile image
With Unity soon to have Linux support as well I see this as a huge boom for developers.

Evan Combs
profile image
Now if we can just get big players on board with Linux (Autodesk, Adobe, etc.) I would switch over completely in a heart beat.

Doug Poston
profile image
I'm not ready to give up my WinBox yet, but this is great news (for everybody except Apple and Microsoft ;)).

Groove Stomp
profile image
AWERSOME!

"Valve will bring its digital distribution service Steam to a third PC platform, Linux, appeasing the operating system's relatively small but devoted userbase who've called for a native client for years."

There are a few inaccuracies in that sentence, but whatever. Steam on Ubuntu. Sweet deal!

Jonathan Ghazarian
profile image
Great news as I'm about to install linux on a new machine.

Todd Boyd
profile image
This only took them FOR F!@#ING E-VER.

Michael van Drempt
profile image
"Linux users have been able to run Steam before using Wine, but an official native client will not have the technical issues that can come with using emulation software"

While the author is right that there are technical issues introduced by using Wine, could we just get one thing clear:

WINE Is Not an Emulator.

Seriously, that's what the acronym means.

But still, this is good news. Go Valve go!


none
 
Comment:
 




 
UBM Tech