Significant — you’d need to either get the old Linux build working (not an easy task today) or you can install it on Windows, copy the files over, and run it via Proton (but you’d need to manually add the registry key with your CD key to the Proton prefix’s registry).
ascagnel
Three thoughts:
- Valve doesn’t use physical media, so there isn’t a need to enforce DRM at the hardware level
- the Deck itself is sold at a small profit regardless of the configuration, so there’s no benefit to pushing users to higher-price configurations
- Valve enforces its DRM in software via the OS
The biggest reasons to lock down hardware aren’t really there on the Deck. On top of that, it benefits Valve to have other devices running their storefront, so using off-the-shelf parts when possible makes it easier for others to use the Deck as a template.
August-November of that year was headlined by a slew of all-time greats: Half-Life 2, San Andreas, MGS3, Halo 2, The Sims 2…
If you were into video games in any way in that time period, you had something great to play, regardless of platform.
Rainbow Six Siege is up there — there’s six dimensions of assholery in the game by my count.
- Tom Clancy games tend to attract right-wing assholes because they’re Tom Clancy
- competitive FPS
- one-shot one-kill gameplay
- friendly fire on by default
- character picks
- you need to play to a specific meta
Universal Paperclips! It’s an idle game that relies on you making smart planning decisions to optimize things, so there’s a degree of strategy that most of them lack.
I have a JBL Link Portable, which seems to be out of stock, but should fill most of your requirements if you can get your hands on one:
- supports Chromecast Audio, AirPlay, and BT
- sounds good
- has good battery (I get 7-8h of playtime against 8h quotes battery life)
- charges over USB-C (both via an included charging dock and a direct cable connection
The only downside is that it has Google’s voice assistant built in, but you can turn it off.
Dance Yrself Clean by LCD Soundsystem would be my choice.
More that the article being a few years old means it’s missed out on a number of notable releases in the interim.
Note the date of the article: October 2021.
I have AA (via their bundle, it’s not really worth it on its own), and within a few weeks I wasn’t able to find online matches. It also didn’t feel great to play (both on touchscreen and controller), and they never released anything beyond 3-on-3 hockey. I would not recommend.
We know why Dolphin wasn’t put on Steam.
- Dolphin ships with a decryption key for Wii games
- Valve’s legal got worried about hosting that, and reached out to Nintendo
- Nintendo did their usual thing and said no (because they wrongly believe all emulation of their hardware is illegal, except if they do it)
- Valve pulled down the Dolphin page on their own, without a legal demand from Nintendo
Valve continues to host RetroArch and the various cores, so it’s not like they’re opposed to emulation in general. The ability to copyright “magic numbers” in the US (Valve is an American company) isn’t up for debate, and it would also put them in violation of the DMCA, so it’s not hard to see why Valve would be worried about this specific emulator.
As for Dolphin, they have options:
- they can choose to keep shipping as-is, without being on Steam
- they can choose to add BIOS support and sidestep the entire question of decrypting keys
- they can require users to enter their own decryption key they dump directly from their consoles (which, realistically, means that users would get one off the web separate from Dolphin)
I checked CapFriendly, all four of the players in the NHL have contracts that expire at the end of the season.
Hart: https://www.capfriendly.com/players/carter-hart
Dube: https://www.capfriendly.com/players/dillon-dube
Foote: https://www.capfriendly.com/players/cal-foote
McLeod: https://www.capfriendly.com/players/michael-mcleod