Long story short: I am absolutely inexperienced with Linux distros but made the switch from Windows a bit more than a year ago. Right now, everyone’s talking about Baldur’s Gate 3, including a lot of the podcasts and shows I follow: since I never experienced the OG games, I wanted to try them out. They were on sale on GOG, and I had previously set up Lutris so that it interfaced directly with it. But the game refuses to start. Every installation method I tried has miserably failed at some point or another, and when it didn’t, the game just won’t boot up (either in Lutris or out of it). I’m out of options and I have asked for a refund. Is the situation with the Steam versions any different?Am I missing something? Help!

  • usrtrv@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I played the enhanced editions on Steam which have a native Linux build. No issues.

    • ampersandrew@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      And to add to this, there’s a Humble Bundle right now with the Steam versions of both of those games included. I’ve also been playing the Enhanced Editions on Steam recently, and they’ve worked just fine on Linux.

  • telemachuszero@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    GOG’s Linux support doesn’t extend much beyond providing you with the binaries that the developers supplied. You’re left to figure out running the games yourself and hoping the developer didn’t make too many assumptions about system libraries.

    Valve provides Linux runtime environments for native Linux games to target and run in, plus tools for developers to use to build for that environment. It’s not perfect but you’ll generally have a much easier time with Linux native games from Steam.

    I’m sympathetic to GOG’s goals, but generally stick with Steam because of Valve’s level of support and commitment.

    If you want to keep using the GOG version, you could try running the Windows build in Heroic Games Launcher + Wine-GE or Proton-GE (they’re available as runners within Heroic, it works pretty seamlessly). You’ll also get Cloud Saves, since GOG doesn’t support it for native Linux.

    The native Linux version of Baldur’s Gate II Enhanced is running fine for me from Steam (on Fedora 38 Silverblue + Steam installed as a Flatpak) and also features cloud saves, if you’re intent on playing the native build and willing to switch to Steam.

  • sidewalker@thesidewalkends.io
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    1 year ago

    I’m sure it will depend a bit on your exact setup (video card especially, and likely display server too) but I can confirm that Baldur’s Gate 2 (the only one I own on Steam) literally just worked with the built-in Proton emulation. I clicked install, then once it downloaded I clicked play and required no additional intervention.

    • ono@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      Text of the accepted answer from that thread:

      As I understand it, even the most current version of the game links to a horribly outdated version of openssl that is no longer shipped by modern Linux distributions. The publisher has neither fixed this nor bundled the version they need, so you will not be able to start the program due to missing openssl-1.0.so. Most distributions provide a special package to install this legacy library, commonly named openssl-compat or similar. You could also choose any of a number of highly questionable sites that purport to host downloads of this obsolete library.

      Meanwhile, Wine runs the Windows version of the game fine. If I recall correctly, I didn’t even need to adjust any settings in Wine to get it to work.

        • Cass.Forest@beehaw.org
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          1 year ago

          I think it does have a multiplayer mode, but not sure why it would require SSL of all things

          Edit: a clause

  • Wrrzag@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    This may be dumb, but if you can run a switch emulator maybe you can play the switch versions? It’d work like a compatibility layer.