Leftovers: Games

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SteamOS Brewmaster 2.61 Beta Update Brings Goodies from Debian Linux 8.3
Valve and the SteamOS developers have announced earlier, January 28, 2016, that they've promoted the SteamOS Brewmaster 2.61 update to the brewmaster_beta channel.
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Medieval II: Total War On Linux, Plays Fine With RadeonSI
Debuting in 2006, Medieval II: Total War, and its Kingdoms expansion, were the final Total War game to use the second version of the Total War Engine. It is also, arguably, the last game in a generation for the series. The follow-up to this game was Empire: Total War (also available on Linux), which changed the game engine, user-interface, as well as several of the gameplay mechanics-- such as adding naval battles.
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Source Engine Powered Black Mesa Is Being Ported To Linux
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Arcen Games, developer of AI War & The Last Federation laying off staff
Sad news today, Arcen Games who support Linux rather nicely with their games is laying off almost all staff members. I like how honest the owner is in that blog post, it's refreshing to see people own up to their failures.
Arcen Games did something for Linux that few other developers do, they ported their entire game catalogue over to Linux, so it's really sad to see this.
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GOG officially offering Early Access games, three have Linux versions right now
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Company of Heroes 2 updated and performs better, The Western Front Armies expansion released
Feral Interactive certainly don’t stop, Company of Heroes 2 has an impressive patch alongside The Western Front Armies expansion release on Linux.
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Games: Old World, Broken Sword 5, Psychonauts 2
| Louis-Philippe Véronneau - Introducing metalfinder
Introducing metalfinder, a cli tool to find concerts using your local music collection! At the moment, it scans your music collection, creates a list of artists and queries Bandsintown for concerts in your town. Multiple output formats are supported, but I mainly use the ATOM one, as I'm a heavy feed reader user.
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Firefox for Android no longer gives the user control over the browsing experience. Privacy Browser turns off JavaScript by default.
Firefox/Fennec for Android no longer give the user significant control over the browsing experience.
The browser that said it was on a mission to enable users to “take back the Web” has been falling from grace for years, starting with Digital Restrictions Malware module, Widevine, and then quickly moving to remove a lot of features and then relegating them to extensions, which were then neutered in order to make them easier to port over from Chrome.
But nothing has made me more upset than what has happened to Firefox (or Fennec, the Free and Open Source version) for Android.
Mozilla’s move to GeckoView rendered over 99% of all Firefox extensions incompatible with the mobile browser, including bypass paywalls, and there is no longer any way that I’m aware of to turn off JavaScript.
Major news Web sites like the New York Times are now unreadable in Firefox for Android because I can’t simply block their paywall like I can in my desktop browser, so I decided to try out Privacy Browser for Android, which is in the F-Droid store.
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