So I’m very new to linux gaming. I swapped like last month and I’ve really been enjoying how well everything I’ve tried on Steam just works these days.
But I was looking to try something a little more advanced next. I saw that there’s a HD “remaster” mod for Freelancer (which is abandonware now, so easy to find for free online). As it’s one of my all time favorite games, and I haven’t played it in like 20 years, I thought it might be fun to check it out again.
I saw that it is on lutris and tried installing it that way. The installation goes fine but after it’s done, the lutris installer just hangs with “return code 256”. Googling it didn’t provide me any useful info other than one guy saying just to install it directly with an empty WINE prefix. I have no idea how to do that and it sounds like it might be more of a pain in the ass than I want to deal with.
But I thought I’d just post here and see if anyone else has tried this and gotten it to work. I can always dual boot back into Windows but I’d rather not do that ever again if I can avoid it. For the record, I’m on Pop!_OS.
Gaming on the GNU/Linux operating system.
Recommended news sources:
Related chat:
Related Communities:
Please be nice to other members. Anyone not being nice will be banned. Keep it fun, respectful and just be awesome to each other.
Have you installed Wine? I mean not in Lutris, but actual Wine in Pop!_OS. Then you can just double click the setup.exe like you’re in windows, install it where you want and then add it to lutris by adding a game manually.
That’s my prefered way of installing any windows program an most of the time it works.
Thanks for the advice. Unfortunately, when I double click setup.exe, it opens ProtonTricks, rather than install anything. I tried running it through the terminal window directly and it looked like it installed but when I tried to run it afterwards I got errors like it couldn’t find the files.
I dunno, I will probably just end up dual booting. This is EXACTLY the kind of experience that kept me from linux for the last couple decades. I am positive with enough effort I could get it working. I just don’t want to put in that kind of effort; I don’t want a new hobby.
Fortunately, when I’m not trying to install a 20-year old game made for the wrong operating system, things DO just work. :-D
Hm, you can “open exe in wine prefix” or something like this from within lutris, maybe that will work