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Cake day: Jul 03, 2023

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UPDATE: I ran the game through terminal as per a suggestion from lemmy.world, and it just worked for some reason, but thank you for the suggestions.


Unable to run Hi-Fi RUSH through Proton
I bought a Steam key for the game Hi-Fi RUSH from [Fanatical](https://www.fanatical.com) today after reading numerous reviews and reports from proton.db, only to find that the game just does not launch. I press PLAY in Steam and all it does is change the PLAY button to CANCEL. I have tried forcing numerous different versions of Proton, adding `-safe` or `-dx11` to advanced startup options, and updating all packages and the kernel, but it still does as described before. OS: Linux Mint 21.2 x86_64 Kernel: 5.15.0-88-generic CPU: AMD Ryzen 7 5700X (16) @ 3.400G GPU: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3070 Lite Ha Memory: 16GB What should I try to get the game running? Are there any better places i can ask this? Any help would be appreciated.
fedilink

Having more extensions makes your browser fingerprint more unique, making it easier to tell you apart from other users.


I’m going to assume you’re using Firefox based on the 5th extension you mentioned.

As for the adblockers, I wouldn’t install multiple as they can conflict with each other and cause issues. I and many other people use uBlock Origin as it is very customizable and you can add your own filters and blocklists to essentially block anything you want. I’m not sure if it works with YouTube though, as I use Invidious.

As for the others, I’ve used YTNS, CAD and Search by Image previously without any issues. I’ve never heard of the rest though.

For a free VPN, the only one I’d trust is ProtonVPN. Most others are either running some sort of scam, or are very unreliable. Their Firefox add-on is terrible however, and requires that you are subscribed to a paid tier, so you’d have to set it up in a different way.

If you’re ever concerned about the privacy/security of a piece of open source software, there are tools available that can scan through the source code and check for tracking or malware. One of the great things about open source is that, if you know what you’re doing, you can modify the source code yourself to suit your own needs.

Edit: Fixed broken links (I hope)