Iām here for another little post to share the interesting things Iāve spotted in gaming! Be it Steam Deck, Linux, general gaming or probably-not-relevant-at-all! And I know, itās been 2 days since my last of these posts:
ā¦but that was a dedicated GOG-specific one, so I reserve the right to inundate you all, if youāll let me.
M aim is to phrase this in a more personal manner than most gaming sites do now. My ever-lasting inspo is the old, old video game sites, blogs and magazines that I never had the privilege of being alive for:
- image/gif/link heavy (Iām a big GIF fan ā and I pronounce it with a hard āgā)
- personal voice (no 1930ās nasal radio presenter voice here!)
- mostly news or articles or points you wonāt find on the ābigā gaming sites, these are the smaller, lesser things that Iām drawn to. I figure youāll have spotted the big news posts elsewhere!
So grab a coffee? Or a tea? Or a tequila? And enjoy <3
Winlator:
What is Winlator?
Winlator is an Android application that lets you to run Windows (x86_64) applications with Wine and Box86/Box64. Itās been very much the hot ticket in the last few months, with the Android emulation scene being deeply invested. I vaguely remember some handheld being developed that even uses this in their marketing (though for the life of me I canāt remember which?!)
Games like GTA V, The Witcher 3, Tomb Raider 2013 run perfectly fine depending on the device. Itās kinda like the new āwhatās next in gamingā for phones.
Whatās happened?
The Android scene has a reputation for having some rather rabid fans. Then thereās a breakaway group of those fans who are just shitty people. Harassing the devs of these projects is far-too-common in that scene, and it seems it has finally hit Winlator also. So weāve seen a hefty amount of that in the last two or three days, but also the developer has been accused of virus activity being found.
Soā¦dev stumbles, fans harass, and the project is dead.
Goodbye Winlatorā¦for now?
Elden Ring
Iāve tried. Maybe 4 times now Iāve tried to like Elden Ring? I adore the fantasy settings, and this one has a grim Gothic edge to it which should really appeal to meā¦but I canāt take being killed 48 times before I can figure out a pattern.
Ironically, I love Deathās Door and Tunic (I know, Tunic is not souls-y, but it still has some of those elements to it)
Anyway, Elden Ring has now sold over 30 million copies. So I know for a fact I am in the minority, so I suppose if youāre tarnished ā celebrate?
BTW, are you excited for the upcoming Elden Ring-y multiplayer game Nightreign? The specs required have been released, too:
Early Access:
I think Iāve got one E.A. game, because I love the ocean and any underwater settings (Leviathan and Deep Star Six, anyone?), which actually equates to 2.38% of my Steam Library (Iām an avid GOG buyer, not Steam!) ā called Ocean Keeper (an underwater rogue-lite game).
Typically, Iāve no interest in Early Access, I donāt think I should pay to have a dev push an unfinished game on me, I get to deal with the bugs, and then have a shit time. But, it seems everyone else kinda loves it.
This graph shows you just how popular this has gotten, and is getting over the years. Itās a sad new state of gaming, but its showing no signs of slowing down:
Blacklist:
Tom Clancyās Splinter Cell: Blacklist now has achievements!
Agents,
We are pleased to announce that Steam Achievements are now available for Splinter Cell: Blacklist!
As a heads up, achievements will be retroactively earned for the accomplishments already completed in your game. For the sync to happen, you need to launch the game once. Once synced, the previously unlocked Ubisoft Connect achievements will be automatically unlocked on Steam.
To ensure that you can complete 100% of the Steam Achievements for Splinter Cell: Blacklist, weāve removed 19 achievements that required online services that are no longer available for the game.
Nightdive:
Nightdive Studios uploaded an interesting video to YouTube.
In this special Deep Dive bonus interview, Nightdiveās Locke Vincent and Larry Kuperman sit down with Bartosz Kwietniewski (Head of Business Development) and Marcin PaczyÅski (Senior Business Development Manager) at GOG.com to explore Nightdiveās relationship with GOG, how GOG has grown and evolved over the years, the importance of game preservation, and more!
At 29:30 itās got a nice little length to it, and if youāre like me and love YouTube but hate ads, Iām going to recommend either uBlock Origin on your desktop browser, or something like NewPipe on Android to watch it without a trillion shitty annoying ads. And I know, thereās probably no one here on Lemmy who doesnāt know how to circumvent ads butā¦better to warn for that possibility!
Anyway, hereās the videoās link, really worth a watch!
Nightdive Again:
Thereās also an interview with Stephen Kick (Nightdive CEO) on Epic Gamesā blog site. Itās really interesting ā Iāve found so many interviews with big names behind the big games on Epicās blog, irrespective of your (no doubt negative) opinion on their company ā so I really encourage you to read this one!
It makes me very excited for the upcoming System Shock 2 25th Anniversary Remaster.
You can find that interview on Epicās site by following this link!
Front-ends:
Iām not even sure if thatās something I should hyphenate or not. Is it a single word? Does it matter?
Iām just curious whether anyone here uses them, and if so what they do use?!
I just wondered what people might use, and what they think of them! Thereās certainly a lot of options these days for desktop gaming :)
GOG & Pix:
Exciting news for our Brazilian gamers!
Pix payment is now fully available on the GOG store
Starting now, you can choose this popular instant payment method provided by the Central Bank of Brazil at checkout to grab any title you want ā fast, simple, hassle-free, and yours to keep forever
Thank you for being a part of the GOG community ā you rock!
As to what Pix is, you can find that out here
They already had an option called āBank Transferā for Brazil, which was actually paid with PIX through BoaCompra. The new method is listed directly as PIX on the cart. Its been tested and itās basically the same, only through other payment processor. Only real difference was that is hasnāt given an e-mail confirmation from the payment processor, only the standard GOG receipt.
Star Wars:
AND some more nice GOG news (theyāve been so busy lately!):
With Star Wars Day approaching, we want to honor this amazing franchise in the best way we can: by adding iconic classics from a galaxy far, far away to the GOG Preservation Program!
- STAR WARS⢠Dark Forces (Classic, 1995)
- STAR WARSā¢: X-Wing Special Edition
- STAR WARS⢠Battlefront (Classic, 2004)
- Star Warsā¢: Rebel Assault 1 + 2
- STAR WARSā¢: TIE Fighter Special Edition
General consensus is that KOTOR would have been a nice one to have added to the program, but this is still amazing news to read.
You can find the latest games added to the program here with this link to GOGās site
Junk Store turns one:
This was their own announcement, itās just easier for me to just copy and paste their announcement straight-up here for you to read:
Today marks one year since we launched version 1.0 of Junk Store ā and what a year itās been.
Version 1.0 was met with a lot of enthusiasm, with over 250,000 downloads to date. We also released a GOG extension, which has seen solid uptake. Since then, weāve made countless updates and improvements to both.
Along the way, we rewrote Junk Store into a standalone version and even got it accepted onto the Steam Store ā briefly. While that was a setback, it pushed us to build something even better.
Instead of relying on Steam, we created our own infrastructure: a full web portal, a storefront, new build and delivery pipelines, and a much-improved Junk Store. All the work we did preparing for Steam wasnāt wasted ā it made Junk Store stronger and more flexible than it ever could have been tied to Valveās systems.
We built our own installers, downloaders, and streamlined extension management (itās now a single button click). We added support for Amazon, Epic, GOG, and any emulator you can call from the command line. Thereās even a global download queue ā which, not joking, probably cost over 1,000 hours of blood, sweat, and code over the last year.
Now, weāre closing in on a major launch. Weāll have more details soon, including what the final release will look like and what the cost will be.
We know not everyone will be thrilled that the next version isnāt free ā but the original open-source version will remain available for those who want it. Weāre aiming for a model thatās both fair and sustainable, so we can keep building and supporting Junk Store for the long haul.
Thanks to everyone whoās been with us on this ride. We truly appreciate your support, without you we wouldnāt have made it this far.
The best is still ahead.
As always,
The Junk Store Team
Expedition 33:
Made by a small team of just 30 members, Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 has now sold over one million copies (as of three days after their launch). They also boast a nice fact that they reached over 120,000 concurrent players on Steam, too.
One thing is for sure, this is a beautiful game, and if you havenāt played it yet its so worth your time!
Itās also:
8BitDo:
Known for their 3rd party controllers for likeā¦everything, which also happen to be quite high quality, 8BitDo has announced it is no longer shipping to the US from China. The 145% tariffs are once again to blame, as is the removal of exemptions for shipments under $800.
Last News Post I listed other companies in the same space (like Anbernic and Retroid) who have stopped shipping to the US after these dumb tariffs.
(you can see here the estimated tariff charge on the Retroid Pocket 5 from AliExpress ā I found this image a user (No_Clock) posted which helps illustrate the cost you might expect)
U.S. buyers can still order items from *8BitDoās U.S. warehouse, but the website doesnāt clearly indicate stock availabilityāonly the checkout process reveals which products canāt be shipped. Popular items like the Ultimate 2 Bluetooth Controller, N64 mod kit, and mini Xbox controller are some of those currently unavailable.
The tariffs classify video game consoles and accessories as toys (not tech), making them subject to high costs. This has caused panic (which is my understatement of the century) in the gaming world, leading to layoffs and halted operations for some companies.
MAME:
Have you been wondering what MAMEĀ 0.277 will bring? Well, now you can find out! First of all, weāve added support for compiling on 64-bit ARM-based systems running WindowsĀ 11 using the MSYS2 CLANGARM64 environment. Updates to included third-party libraries should resolve some issues people were having with new compilers and development environments.
In improvements that you can see, KonamiĀ GX blending effects are now looking much nicer, Sega ModelĀ 2 3D geometry is behaving better, and some remaining issues with Philips CD-i graphics decoding have been fixed. You may be able to hear improved sound emulation in some Famicom, WonderSwan, and GameĀ Boy games, too. If thatās too subtle, you should be able to hear the difference in the DMX and LinnDrum percussion synthesisers.
Thereās a big update for the AppleĀ II and Macintosh floppy disk software lists this month. A lot of Macintosh NuBus cards have been overhauled as well, so let us know if weāve inadvertently broken your virtual Macintosh setup. There are plenty of other software list additions, including a batch of tapes for Sinclair computers.
Thatās all weāre going to cover here, but much more has happened this month in MAME development. You can read all about it in the whatsnew.txt file
Epic Games:
Teased a free game coming soon, in-line with other Star Wars announcements, it looks like youāll get a free-to-claim Star Wars title!
Delta Force:
If you were hoping Delta Force might be supported on Linux, then donāt hold your breath:
La Quimera:
ā¦has been quietly delayed. Worth noting is that this happened on their release day, with no official announcement as to why, or when to expect it to arrive. More odd is that it was posted by the devs to their discussion board on Steam, but it was quickly deleted. Soā¦who knows.
Custom GameBoy:
Iāve shared MaSaKeeās work before, but this is a user who hacks hardware and creates their own āversionsā of handheld consoles.
This time they have GBA built into a Wii Classic Controller! Images as follows:
Game Pass:
Seven games have been announced for Game Pass for May 2025 (so far!):
- Anno 1800 (May 1)
- Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 (May 1)
- Dredge (May 6) one of my fav games of all time!!!
- Revenge of the Savage Planet (May 8)
- DOOM: The Dark Ages (May 15)
- To A T (May 28)
- Spray Paint Simulator (May TBD)
Wizordum:
Wizordum is finally out of early access!
The Ancient Seal of Terrabruma has shattered, unleashing the forces of Chaos once more. As one of the last Mages of Wizordum sanctuary, you must embark on a quest to find the source of this corruption and push the Chaos back before they consume the kingdom in a speedrun-friendly fantasy FPS tearing a page from the spellbooks of ā90s fantasy FPS classics like Hexen and Heretic.
You can read their announcement here on Steam!
GOG error:
Have you seen the cute lil GOG display? I adore it!
Coming Soon:
Iāve been asking my friends if theyāll agree to me āinterviewingā them (this is a very loose term, itās just going to be a question-and-answer which might be the least professional thing youāll ever see) and posting those here.
Iāve done this before in the past (back when I was on Reddit), but I suppose I want to expand the idea and post them here.
I like the idea of getting to know the people ā the devs, support and community managers behind the projects you use on Steam Deck and Linux. I feel like sometimes those people are forgotten, and its the end product you see, not those behind it.
A peep behind the curtains, so to speak.
To start with Iām organizing this with Lazorne (and the RetroDECK team), but will also be doing this with AA (of Decky Loader), the Junk Store team, two YouTubers who create content on Linux and the Steam Deckā¦and so on.
Hopefully this will be fun, at least itās something unique to Lemmy, and again ā I think the people who spend countless hours behind the projects get the least attention, Iād like to change that a little
Finally?
Any thoughts on my posts? I get asked a lot if I have a site for these, and for now the answer is ānoā, but I will heed the advice and back these up somewhere. Unsure why exactly, but thatāll be less-than-little effort to do, so Iāll get to it eventually!
But what do you think? Have you any suggestions? This will be the 13th of these Iāve posted, and Iād love to hear if youād want me to do something (anything) differently!
& any errors on here are all my own. Thereās always at least one. Soā¦forgive me!
One reminder:, since this is the 13th of these, and here are the others:
- Steam Deck / Gaming News #2
- Steam Deck / Gaming News #3
- Steam Deck / Gaming News #4
- Steam Deck / Gaming News #5
- Steam Deck / Gaming News #6
- Steam Deck / Gaming News #7
- Steam Deck / Gaming News #8
- Steam Deck / Gaming News #9
- Steam Deck / Gaming News #10
- Steam Deck / Gaming News #11
- Steam Deck / Gaming News #12
p.s. if you wanna find me on Mastodon because Iām constantly sharing nonsense - you can find me here:
Couldnāt agree more with your take on Early Access bullshittery. I too refuse to pay for anything that is āreleasedā and described as much. It is just another thing after micro transactions that have further ruined gaming and despite a personal boycott of these practiceās still gets ever more common :(