TransGaming Launches Mac Game Portal 78
Gamasutra is reporting that TransGaming, maker of Cedega, has announced the launch of the new Mac video game distribution portal, "GameTree." "GameTree Online hopes to replicate digital distribution offerings for Windows-based PC, enabling consumers to purchase and download Mac games, read gaming news, participate in promotional opportunities, and write game reviews. TransGaming plans to continually add new titles from a mix of genres to its online portal."
Cake? (Score:5, Funny)
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Too bad it was a lie...
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Their product sucks ass in linux. Like I need to pay them monthly to configure my wine. If I were lucky, they might update their product this century.
I have better luck with wine on my own.
They can get their cake from the mac folks....
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Yet another "Fuck You" to PPC (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Yet another "Fuck You" to PPC (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:Yet another "Fuck You" to PPC (Score:4, Funny)
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I still have a iMac DV G3/400Mhz that is officially supported under 10.4(Tiger). It's still useful for testing stuff and for light use. I have upgraded it with a 120GB 7200RPM HD and 512MB of RAM.
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Seriously, what sense makes it to create a software which demands high end hardware (gaming)
and port it on a computer base consisting of mostly 3 or 4 year old systems? Most of them
lack of RAM, lack of GPU-power, lack of CPU-speed.
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Plus the market for low-end PC gaming doesn't really seem to be there.
Re:Yet another "Fuck You" to PPC (Score:5, Insightful)
What? are you serious?
Transgaming/Cedega is basically an enhancement/fork/product based on the WINE project that lets you run Windows apps on the *nix OSes. As I'm sure you know, WINE is one one of those recursive acronyms... Wine is not an emulator. Meaning that it lets you run Windows software by implementing the Windows API, and then running the code against.
Given that Wine is not an emulator, and the software running on it was compiled for x86 by its respective makers, why exactly would you expect it to run on a G5?
If I had an Intel Mac, I'd just put Windows on a partition.
The point of transgaming/cedega WINE is to run software -without- buying a copy of windows. It doesn't let you run windows software without x86 machines, it lets you run windows software without windows.
Kind of pointless, if you ask me.
If saving you having to buy and install windows to run a game on your Mac is pointless. Then yes, it is pointless. Most people however think there is a clear and obvious point.
Not every Mac user buys a new computer every time Apple comes out with a new product line.
If you wanted/expected to ever run Windows games on that computer, you would never have selected a G5 in the first place.
Re:Yet another "Fuck You" to PPC (Score:5, Insightful)
I know you think that. We all think that. It's not reality.
Gaming was one of the things I wanted to do when I got my MacBook Pro. I tried doing some gaming through Parallels. Even with it's 3D support, it can't do much. I'm not sure how well it would run Half-Life (not 2... the first). If you want to play Bejeweled, Chuzzle, NetHack, or other relativly simple games you're fine. If you want to run some special Windows only program you're golden. If you want to play Mass Effect you're dead.
So I have a Windows partition. I have used it for three things at this point. Half-Life 2, Sam & Max, and Team Fortress 2.
I play TF2 quite a bit. That said, I'd play it at least twice as often if I didn't have to reboot to Windows. I ran into the same problem (but stronger) with HL2 and Sam & Max.
So I have to quit any open applications, save my progress in all of them, no matter how small, close all windows, whatever. Then I have to reboot. Then I have to hold down Option, then select Windows. Then I wait for Windows to boot. Then I wait for Windows to finish loading. Then I wait for the game to load. Then I wait to get into a server.
The whole process (complicated a tiny bit by the fact I use an external drive because my Windows partition is small) means it takes a good 10-15 minutes of my time to get into and out of Windows.
That's bad enough. What if I want to stop what I'm doing, play a game for a while, then go back to what I'm doing? I have to go through all that. I have to re-open everything. It takes a ton of time.
If I want to quit the game, check my email, and go back I have to use webmail because it would take so long to get over to OS X and back to Windows. I have to basically plan when I want to play a game that needs Windows. I have to really want to play. It just takes enough time that I can't drop what I'm doing for a half-hour session, because I'll lose a large chunk of that to rebooting and such.
It's a testament to how much I wanted to play HL2, Sam & Max, and how much I continue to want to play TF2 that I continue to bother. Those people who say "Boot Camp will kill Mac gaming" obviously aren't trying to use Boot Camp for gaming much. I like it much much better than nothing (I wouldn't try HL2/TF2 on a console), but it's no substitute for native gaming.
While not as good as native, being able to use something like Cinega is a huge plus for me. I would gladly use it if I thought I could get good performance out of the game I want to play (and I didn't think I might get kicked for cheating due to Valve Anti-Cheat).
I would gladly purchase all of Orange Box again just to get TF2 native for Mac if they offered it.
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Cedega and the other products weren't available (or very reliable) when I first got my Intel based Mac. By the time they came around I'm pretty sure I was already using Windows to play.
It's nice to know the games are ready, but I would still be very weary due to Steam. I'd be worried about performance too. It's all nice when you have a late generation GeForce 12 or whatever, but I'm on a laptop with a 1.5-2 year old graphics chip. To run at high resolutions with playable framerates (~30 most of the time) I
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However, unlike Wine itself, TransGaming's fork doesn't support PPC.
Re:Yet another "Fuck You" to PPC (Score:4, Informative)
That's a pretty BIG if.
However, unlike Wine itself, TransGaming's fork doesn't support PPC.
PPC hasn't been used in a mainstream desktop, not even an Apple one, for a couple years now. What would be the point of supporting a platform that is too slow to run the games coming down the pipe, even if they were running natively? Transgaming is a business, not a labour of love.
Wine on PPC architecures (Score:2)
And of course, it's actually just Intel-based Macs
Transgaming/Cedega is basically an enhancement/fork/product based on the WINE project that lets you run Windows apps on the *nix OSes. {...} it lets you run Windows software by implementing the Windows API, and then running the code against. {...} the software running on it was compiled for x86 by its respective makers, why exactly would you expect it to run on a G5?
On the other hand there's a special linux-on-linux mode in qemu that let you run linux binaries from one architecture on a linux box installed for a different architecture. Without installing a complete linux host inside a qemu virtual machine, but simply emulating the guest ISA in qemu for executing the software it self, but calling API on the host whenever the software run in qemu tried to access something outside.
Even since Apple switched from Classic Mac OS to Mac OS X, there was a project called Darwi [sourceforge.net]
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Performance in actual emulation software is a fraction of what can be done natively. Transgaming/Cedgega is primarily working on modern games that push modern hardware running natively for crying out loud. Nobody in their right mind would really expect them to run remotely well in EMULATION on a PC/Mac that was a few years old.
And yeah, q
Re:Wine on PPC architecures (Score:4, Funny)
Most games GPU bound not CPU bound (Score:2)
That's because most games are usually GPU bound, not CPU boung. The CPU start to be significant only once you almost completely shut off the graphics.
What is important for a game is to have a nice and good graphic card. What is important for gaming w
Re:Yet another "Fuck You" to PPC (Score:4, Funny)
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I'm not saying that IBM was any better, but due to
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I notice my Apple IIc was completly overlooked as well.
I would suspect you knew the G5 was being phased out and that's why you bought it.
I could be wrong.
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Other comments here are pointing out that TransGaming's technology would never run on a Mac. But that doesn't change the fact that PPC computers are having their shelf-life abruptly terminated by the relative popularity of Intel Macs. If TransGaming didn't exist, more software would be genuinely ported to the Mac, as opposed to simply recompiled against the Cider libraries.
I have a Dual 2Ghz G5, 4GB RAM, NVidia 7600GT. Not the world's fastest machine, sure, but I don't have a single speed c
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I have two games that run on the Mac under this platform. Eve online and Secondlife. I have the games both on the Mac side and on the Windows XP side. On the Mac side, they are playable but not great. Secondlife is somewhat slow. On the Windows side they scream.
Guess what side I play?
We don't need more games runing under Wine, we need more native binaries.
Re:To bad that macs don't have good hardware for g (Score:3, Interesting)
Oh, I'm sorry, I guess I should stop playing PC games on my Imac dual-booted to XP using Bootcamp then.
Its not the best platform for playing games, but its let me play Starwars Galaxies, City of Heroes, Age of Conan and Pirates of the Burning Sea effectively enough, some of them even run quite well.
Now I would prefer to have native OS/X versions of these games of course, but the Imac seems to run XP just fine in the meantime. The only downside is that Apple is very slow to update their drivers for XP unde
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It's an OK chip but Conan will look a lot better on a nicer card.
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Certainly its got a gorgeous LCD screen, good enough sound etc. The video is good enough for the moment (its a very recent Imac) but when the next generation of games comes out, I am more or less hooped u
Re:To bad that macs don't have good hardware for g (Score:4, Insightful)
iMac: ATI HD2400, 26000, or nV 8800GS
Mac Pro: ATI HD2600XT
MacBook: Ok, crap integrated on this one
MB Pro: nV 8600GT
Not too bad, especially considering most off-the-shelf Windows PCs have crappy integrated graphics....nV 7150, ATI x1150, Intel X3100, etc...garbage. Even nicer $800+ desktops or so don't usually come with video horsepower (nV 8300 is still shit) unless you buy a gaming PC. Laptops are even worse. There are a plethora of large (15"+) $1500k+ laptops out there that could have good GPUs that don't.
Now if you get into stuff on places like Newegg, yes, you will find a better ratio. But Newegg is not the bulk of the Windows PC industry. (D)Hell, Worst Buy, and Circuit Shity are.
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The other issue is performance. Most games (higher-end ones) that get ported over suffer from performance hits, sometimes as bad as 25%. If you poke around, you'll find plenty of benchmarks comparing games like Unreal Tournament on OSX and then bootcamping into XP on the same hardware, and getting a significant performance boost. Those games were optimized for Windows, and Mac compatibility was just afterthought t
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Except for the 8800GS, these are definately not "gaming" video cards.
HD3650 would be good if they had them, and even then it'd play like crap on the iMac's resolutions. Especially considering they insist to put them with such big monitors.
And aren't these mobile cards?
Mac Pro: ATI HD2600XT
Definately not a good card, wasn't this squished in between the 8600GT and HD3650 in terms of age with the performance of a X1650 on a smaller die?
And you're paying a pretty premium for
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I have an 8600M GS, a weaker card than the GT by a good margin, in my Asus laptop...it plays Crysis (not that well, but playable at medium-low settings), Tabula Rasa actually works great, Team Fortress 2 runs smooth on medium settings (all this at 1680x1050). Obviously my 8800GTX in my gaming desktop
outperforms these considerably, but when I'm 7,000 miles away from it in some stinkhole of a hotel in the Philippines,
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Also on the iMac range the only way to get the 8600 is to buy the most expensive 24" model.
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Transgaming's Business Model (Score:3, Funny)
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For example World of Warcraft runs better with bug standard WINE then then with Cedega pimped up version.
Just in case you wonder: Cedega, Transgaming, GameTree - all the same.
Martin
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In the end I stopped paying these people because they refused my patches. The WINE project was happy to have them, so I saw no benefit to sticking with Cedega.
The lesson people should learn is that democracy is no good if it is the *only* way to get stuff done. If an individual can't take their own destiny by the horns and is alw
transgaming? (Score:5, Funny)
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Glenda (formerly Mark) Adams [mac.com]
Rebecca (formerly "Burger Bill") Heineman [wikipedia.org]
Umm... (Score:1)
They have three games. Wow. Color me impressed.
Link to the actual portal (Score:2, Informative)
Here's the link to the actual portal [gametreeonline.com]. (Annoyingly not included in the summary OR the Gamasutra hosted press release.)
Looks like yet another portal attempting to bank in with the same games already hosted on existing portals like Big Fish Games [bigfishgames.com] and Game Socks [gamesocks.com]...
The more the merrier, I guess.
Difference with Crossover Games for Mac? (Score:1)
Finally! (Score:3, Funny)
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WoW Windows vs Mac (Score:2)
World of Warcraft runs great on my MacPro and my Wifes iMac. Both outperform my Fathers custom made water cooled gaming machine.
Now it should be noted that my Fathers custom made water cooled gaming machine has the newest graphic card in town and the fastest Athlon you can get. Both at the time of course - we all know how fast gaming hardware ages.
I take it that my MacPro was only marginally more expensive but with 200+ fps it runs circles around my fathers computer - and that without actually breaking into a sweat.
Which is the best part of it: All that water cooling stuff
WoW run great on Mac (Score:2)
All World of Warcraft DVD come with both with a Windows and an OSX version - no need to search for Mac version in the shops either.
BTW: World of Warcraft also runs on Linux using bog standard WINE. Note that after a nasty glitch in there anti cheat program Blizzard sanctioned the use of Linux a platform (as in: "Using Linux to play is not considered cheating").
World of Warcraft is
How about more NATIVE mac games. (Score:2)
With Apple's big push towards iPhone, I can just see Jobs trying to get companies to write serious games for i[Pod|phone|touch]
With the unbelievable amount of 3 (Three!) Games (Score:3, Funny)
It's got a great list of games (Score:3, Funny)
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