Civ3 For Linux 119
DP writes "Well, it is known known which game they will be porting.
Civilization: Call to Power (CIV III, basically), will be fully ported to linux by Loki Software, all utilities and extras included. "
How many hours did I lose to the original Civ? Man, this is
great news.
Linux == freeware? (Score:1)
Civ1 clone? (Score:1)
FreeCiv sucks (Score:1)
wabi! (Score:1)
Civ3 (Score:1)
Oh slag off (Score:1)
--Loki (no relation to Loki software)
WinG (Score:1)
...
Hmm... wine/graphics/wing.c sure looks like a WinG implementation...
I'll buy it... (Score:1)
...as soon as it comes out. Hopefully their next game will be something more action-oriented though...my voodoo2 is getting bored playing only Quake2.
-W.W.
Turn-based 'leader' games are perfect for Linux. (Score:1)
Civ always struck me as being exactly the right kind of game to do in the Xwindow environment.
Lots and lots of information up in lots of little popup windows is the kind of thing X excells at. And the way it can be done interspersed with 'real' work makes it just perfect. (Play a turn of Civ while watching your 'make' out of the corner of your eye, that sort of thing). Plus, the type of audience that likes that kind of game tends to overlap a lot with the 'geek' audience, so it makes marketing sense to put something like that on Linux.
I'll look forward to it. Other games that would be similarly sensible to have in X windows are other turn-based 'leader' perspective games, Deadlock, Star Wars Rebellion (not turn based, but should have been), that sort of thing.
killer ... (Score:1)
I got my 50 dollars ready. (Score:1)
Civ is great, transport tycoon is better! (Score:1)
WINE? (Score:1)
^~~^~^^~~^~^~^~^^~^^~^~^~~^^^~^^~~^~~~^
ABORTED effort:
Close all that you have.
Free-Civ Rocks! (Score:1)
Yes, It Would.. (Score:1)
Why to fear commercial appz/gamez? Bah! (Score:1)
I use Linux. Not because it's Linux, not because it's free but because it works. You could be potentially seen as someone that just wants a free ride on all software because it presents less of a burden on your finances.
Well, games just aren't all going to be that way. Feel lucky that any commercial game companies release any source code. If all you're going to do is whine then why not write to the companies that make these decisions rather than sitting in this forum doing little to help what you see as a problem.
I don't care if software is free. I don't care if it has source. I do care that it allows me to get my work done or, in the case of games, entertain me to the level I expect of a particular game. I have no problem supporting those that provide me with my requirements. :This is what i think is the mistake of KDE for :example, and let's ignore the fact that QT is :going to be free, in the days that QT was not :free, what's the taste to free the world from :Microsoft if you bring them to the control of :some other properity software company(Troll :Tech)?
KDE was a mistake in your eyes. I've never seen a problem with KDE and have been quite happy with it for some time now. I couldn't really care less if QT is free or not. It makes no difference as long as it works.
Everyone's aware of FreeCiv, right? (Score:1)
www.freeciv.org [freeciv.org]
Freeciv, as you might expect, is a GPL Civilization clone. It's quite good, in both multiplayer and single player modes. You really don't have an excuse for booting Windows to play Civ any more, unless you really like those annoying little songs that get played over and over...
--
The Linux Game Tome [happypenguin.org]
First commercial game for Linux? (Score:1)
It's coming out for BeOS... (Score:1)
Hmmm. BeOS is really nothing like Linux/X (in terms of the API), so there's no particular technical reason why it would be natural to port it. But it's reassuring that they pay attention to alternate OSes, so perhaps they could be convinced.
In fact, they used to be very Mac-oriented, and for a long time their games would come out for the Mac first, with the DOS/Windows version following by a few months if it ever got ported at all.
Quake-a-holics, please form a line to the left... (Score:1)
The company I work at used to have an official quake server for employees. "Used to" being the key phrase. (Unfortunately this was before I got here.)
Now, there is a mistake!
FreeCiv sucks (Score:1)
But you didn't answer my question.
To restate: if you're paying, why not pay open source developers instead of developers who only give you limited rights to use what you're paying for?
WINE? (Score:1)
I hate this! (Score:1)
Thankfully, a few enlightened developers such as id release the source code after they have milked the games.
FreeCiv sucks (Score:1)
Basically, what Open Source gives you is unlimited peer reviewing, and (if the project is cool), free bug fixes. This happens because the difference between an application working and an application not working is self evident and clear, and subjective elements of taste have nothing to do with it.
On the other hand, in an Open Source environment, how would you go around fixing, say, Quake2's AI? What is OK for somebody is way too agressive for somebody else, or too wimpy for somebody else yet. How do you choose what is a good ending and what isn't? There is just too many variables and too much subjectivity involved.
On the other hand, I agree that the community should have Open Source game **engines**, and luckily, there are a few of those out. But as far as the end user is concerned, he benefits more from giving the money to Activision for the game he wants to play than from giving it to a group of developers for their own project.
Consider this... Why are so many more people working on conversions of Quake and Quake2 than there are working on entirely new games based off the (free now) Doom engine?
Why to fear commercial appz/gamez? (Score:1)
Could you explain your position, as I can not follow you?
Whats the danger of an app you simply dont need to buy?
*I* will buy one if it is native linux port.
I spent at least 40 hours one month on Civ... (Score:1)
Like many others, I'd LOVE a SC3k port as well. Or a way to get it under Wine. Or SVGAlib. Or ANYTHING... (Yes I know about LinCity, don't like it much...)
Oh GOD! (Score:1)
I blew almost a whole year of school because of that bloody game!
OOOO yes! (Score:1)
FAT partition to make room for Civ3, baby!
You must buy this game. (Score:1)
FreeCiv - tried it (Score:1)
Civ2, I am a programmer working on PSX versions (Score:1)
YES!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! (Score:1)
noah
SOLD! (Score:1)
-Philip
Railroad Tychoon II (Score:1)
2.2, and now this. (Score:1)
(have they gotten rid of the util-linux trojan yet?)
wonder what will be the format (Score:1)
There were counterexamples (SO, wp8, oracle etc.) and it was really annoying.
Let's make those companies to play the linux game by the rules of the community!
Szo
wonder what will be the format (Score:1)
Szo
oh no (Score:1)
I hate this! (Score:1)
free software.then they said you can't get a good free OS, and now they say you can't have good free games.
I hate this! (Score:1)
a socialist/anarchistic ideal, intends to free people,
not to put them in a cage like happend in russia that was controlled
by the communist party, or like happening today in the
western world, specificly in the U.S, where the capitalists control.
I hate this! (Score:1)
games improve slowly, look at lincity and freeciv,
they are not perfect, but they are quite good.
it's just like a few years ago people said that the
desktop is going to stay properity, and now look at KDE and GNOME.
it's all a matter of time, you just have to believe
I hate this! (Score:1)
If you don't buy these games, than the companies will have no choice other than releasing the source code,
and when they do, those games will become even better
They have to do some of their work in-house (Score:1)
bastards (Score:1)
Now that Macs are becoming more popular, and have the graphic toolkits (like glide) to target, I imagine you'll see more ports. I just don't want to see Mac support to turn into another affirmative action debate.
Alpha Centauri Port is a possibility (Score:1)
Interview with Loki (Score:1)
Kick Ass..... (Score:1)
Woohoo!! (Score:1)
Wow... (Score:1)
It's too bad Linux, BeOS, etc. aren't quite mainstream enough to get some of the other games, too... I'm right in the middle of Grim Fandango at the moment, but I hate having to boot to Windows to play it.
- Slarty
i will never have to boot windows again! (Score:1)
wonder what will be the format (Score:1)
Paying for software (Score:1)
What is the economic insentive for the companies to spend maybe millions to develop an app or a game, and then *give* away the product?
Some products don't lend itself well to the open-source model of making money (selling support).
And where would I get the money to make those games, if I didn't charge for it? Doubt McDonalds pays enough for me to buy that 3D card which would give my game the edge I need...
Economics...
There is a God... (Score:1)
If someone gets a Starcraft petition up, I'd sign! (Score:1)
Hey, if someone got up a petition for Linux Starcraft, you can bet I'd sign it!
I hate the "cheapskate Linux-user" image... (Score:1)
While part of the crowd making these complaints might have semi-legitimate ideological reasons for it, sometimes I get the feeling that a lot of Linux users are just so used to getting stuff for free that they think all software for free systems, whether "free software" or not, should be "free as in beer" as well as (or instead of) "free as in speech." I wouldn't be surprised if one of the major reasons that Linux had a dearth of software is due to that very notion, the perception that Linux-users wouldn't pay for the software they used.
If you want more games to come to Linux, email the game companies and tell them you would buy the games. Help Linux shed the cheapskate image.
Don't fear commercial appz/gamez (Score:1)
I honestly don't care about the ideology. If OSS is so superior, as everyone believes it is, then it will win out naturally--look at the strides Linux has taken. In the mean time, I'm going to buy whatever I want to buy.
Linux Faction (Score:1)
Excellent defensive capabilities.
I'd build it...
Commercial Games under Linux (Score:1)
Thanks LokiSoft
PS: I don't quite care at this point if Civilization: Call To Power is written by the original author or not if gets me hooked in the same way the first two did.
Oh get over it! Make your own units then! (Score:1)
-Twinkie
M$ Embraces & Extends Linux... with AoE? (Score:1)
Imagine M$ trying to gain a foothold somehow in the Linux OS/market by releasing quality products and games on the Linux OS? Imagine! Competing fairly and on the merit of quality and value! What is wrong with the world.
Oh well, we can dream, right?
M$ Flight simulator would be nice, on Linux, while I'm dreaming. Anyone else with a wish? Support for their Wheel Intellimouse? Their Freestyle Pro? DirectX for Linux?
-Twinkie
Paying for software (Score:1)
Lets say we give the money to the FreeCiv guys and they produce something, say Civ2:MGE edition... except that MGE is already out; so we would choose to buy MGE instead. How about we be generous? Give them the money, and expect a better product from them than from Microprose, who would no doubt use the money from MGE to produce Civ3 or some future successor... Like CtP! So, Tim, if you're still reading, or someone else who likes to argue =), what is the value in supporting FreeCiv when we can get Microprose, Activision, and Firaxis to jump flaming hoops for us because we buy their games and vote with our wallets? I'm curious, because while I value the Open Source model for its flexibility, innovation, and stability, I don't know that it is the perfect or superior model in any situation.
-Twinkie
Hmm. Nice point =) (Score:1)
I would like that Option for Quake3:Arena, especially since they plan to support Mac, Win32, and Linux all at once, as well as various SGIs, VisualPCs, Alphas, and such. There are thus several overlapping but distinct ideologies involved...
Open Source -> No company lock on the product
Open Engine -> Pay for the game, not the technology, akin to buying a CD player for cheap and then picking and choosing your music
Cross-Platform/Portable -> Game is not machine bound, nor OS bound
Linux is obviously Open Source and Cross Platform
Civ2:MGE is not Open Source, is not Cross Platform, but is Open Engine, as you can modify the rules, graphics, landscape, and units to suit any taste.
Quake2 is Open Engine and Cross Platform, allowing anyone with hardware acceleration(almost) to play almost any game with its open set of rules and rendering.
I guess jumping through flaming hoops is an exageration... But in a real sense, the only way to sell a game in a competative market is to sell something people want to play, and if we want to play Civ games, companies will produce Civ games... If we want to play Id games(ugh), companies will produce FPS...
But we do and can vote with our wallets; games that are no good, we don't buy, and games that are fun are snapped off the shelves (See Baldur's Gate and Final Fantasy VIII as examples =)
Twinkie
Freeciv (Score:1)