There are games that we cannot play on Linux because of anticheat, which detects wine/proton translation.

How do I tell the company that produces this game that I am interested in playing it on Linux?

The company behind the game I am interested in does not allow any e-mail contact. The only way to contact them is the ticket system. I sent a ticket that I’d like to play it on Linux, but got only a generic response to follow up on news etc.

Maybe if we flooded them with such tickets, they would finally see that it might be worth considering?

What do you think about it?

  • neytjs@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Best just to boycott those games/companies and play/promote Linux-friendly games.

  • Xirup@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 year ago

    I don’t want to be pessimistic, but I consider that in this scenario (as a Battlefield 2042 player) there are only three possible options:

    1. The company kindly activates Proton/Wine support, but they don’t do it because they love their users, they do it because they realized that specifically the Steam Deck has a certain market share that they are losing.

    2. Valve makes an agreement with those companies and with the anticheats and allows us gamers to play from Linux as if it was Windows but not bypassing the anticheat, but implementing some kind of anticheat also for Wine/Proton.

    3. The one I consider most likely, we’re screwed and we’ll have to wait for some hacker (or experienced users) to figure out how the hell to make the anticheat think we’re in Windows when we’re really in Wine. It seems to me that this happens with some Wine prefixes that I have no idea make it possible to play LOL on Linux.

    • WasPentalive@lemmy.one
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      1 year ago

      Since they wish to maintain a cheat free environment, perhaps they should stand up a server only for Linux users where the anti-cheat is not required. This way they can serve the Linux community. Players who want to play under Linux will be informed that they play without the benefit of the anti-cheat?

      • panmeek@lemmy.sdf.org
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        1 year ago

        yeah it’s a cool solution, but I think that the servers won’t be populated much and the matchmaking time will be like 10-15 minutes.

      • Yuumi@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        That would be very cool actually. And hell, while they are at it, give us the tools to host the servers on our own and moderate them. IMO this would solve some issues

    • folkrav@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago
      1. Headless capitalistic entities don’t love their users.
      2. Native support or this are the best case scenarios.
      3. Those workarounds would probably get flagged as cheating by those anti-cheat software, hell, some of these work as literal rootkits. I think Riot/LoL is a special case, they don’t directly support it, but also don’t treat it as a bannable offense, or something like that.
  • dinckel@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    This has been an age old battle. Some of them changed their mind, under the pressure of the steam deck, and some didn’t. Those who didn’t will probably never change it at this point, despite literal hundreds of thousands of forum threads, that are still not stopping.

    Your first checkpoint should be here

  • ChiwaWithMujicanoHat@mujico.org
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    1 year ago

    Maybe if we flooded them with such tickets, they would finally see that it might be worth considering?

    I’ve worked in customer support and most of the time these type of tickets just get a copy pasted response basically saying thanks for your feedback, kindly go fuck yourself.

    If you want something that could be reviewed I’d suggest contacting their legal department or even their HR department. The other option is to look for individual employees emails and socials and just message them.

    I recommend not doing any of these things though, because it can be quite annoying to deal with these types of requests, as you will likely not be the first person to suggest this.

  • OsrsNeedsF2P@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Send an email to the CEO, make a post on their forums, anything helps tbh. I disagree with other people saying nothing can be done, because the noise matters when lots of people do it.

    There’s no standard way, since the standard methods tend to get ignored. But if you make a public thread or ticket, link it in this community and we can upvote it too!

  • broface@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Most big companies have feedback channels for customers on their websites.

    What company are you talking about in particular?

    • deadcade@lemmy.deadca.de
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      1 year ago

      This isn’t about “making the game work”, or “adding Linux support”. This is about toggling a checkbox to stop explicitly preventing Linux from working.

      The games that already did never faced a massive cheater problem because of it. The games that have stopped development long ago or “don’t care about Linux” (without preventing it with anti cheat) were still made playable by Wine and Proton.

      If the developer wants, they can add system info to their ticket system and filter out any Linux tickets. It costs a game developer barely anything to decide to allow Linux users. Linux support costs a lot, but valve, wine, and the community has been putting a lot of effort in so game developers don’t have to change anything about their game.

  • mvirts@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I really hate this answer, but it may just make sense to run windows. Paying a proprietary game on a foss system has little benefit. For a truly braindead approach, would running the game in a windows vm satisfy current anti cheat tech?