hello fellow sailers , hope you’re having a nice day , a few months back i switched to arch linux because my computer has good ram but not that good gpu , but now i would like to play some og games like portal 2 , portal 1 , inscryption etc from fitgirl repacks and i have scoured through many guides but nothing just works , too complicated. can’t there be a simple guide with preferably images or something like that (like a website /blog maybe?) I would really appreciate that since many of my friends may like to join linux ship but they are pirates like me as well who wouldn’t be able to play games on linux. #Fitgirl-repacks,#Linux

  • @moody@lemmings.world
    link
    fedilink
    English
    411 months ago

    Not sure what it’s called, but there’s a downloader that just pulls the files straight from Steam. If you don’t own the game, Steam won’t run it, but you already have the files and you can use a Steam DRM crack.

      • @moody@lemmings.world
        link
        fedilink
        English
        311 months ago

        Maybe? I know SteamCMD is just the command-line version of their client. Does it require credentials to download?

        Back in the day, there was a GUI tool that would just download any game from Steam, but I don’t know if it’s still a thing.

        • lemmyvore
          link
          fedilink
          English
          311 months ago

          You have to login with your steam account, but yes, it lets you download pretty much anything, things that the normal Steam won’t let you play because you haven’t bought them or for other weird reasons.

          Typical use for steamcmd is to force-download the Windows version of a game that the publisher insists can’t be played with Proton. I’ve used it for example to force-download the Binding of Isaac, which works perfectly fine with Proton, but for some reason the game refused to install with regular Steam on Linux. After I downloaded it I could set the compatibility to Proton and it worked fine. 🤷

          You can also use steamcmd to automate the installation of multiple games, for example after you reinstalled your PC, and so on.