Get Portal for free and Steam officially ported to Linux!

All the inane chatter goes in here. If you're curious about whether we will support a game, post HERE not in General Discussion :)

Moderator: ScummVM Team

User avatar
MusicallyInspired
Posts: 1138
Joined: Fri Mar 02, 2007 8:03 am
Location: Manitoba, Canada
Contact:

Get Portal for free and Steam officially ported to Linux!

Post by MusicallyInspired »

http://store.steampowered.com/freeportal/

Go get it now if you don't own it! This isn't a temporary deal. It is a temporary offer, but once you buy it (for free) you own it. Even after the due date (May 24th) is passed. Go and get it now even if you're computer can't play it! Someday maybe you'll get a good enough computer so you can play it and you'll thank your lucky stars that you managed to take advantage of this incredible deal while it was free!

Those of you who don't know what Portal is....you're beyond help.

EDIT: Official Linux port announcement.
Last edited by MusicallyInspired on Thu May 13, 2010 4:32 am, edited 1 time in total.
User avatar
criezy
ScummVM Developer
Posts: 955
Joined: Sat Sep 23, 2006 10:41 am
Location: West Sussex, UK

Post by criezy »

And they have a LucasArts Adventure Pack with Indy 3, Indy 4, The Dig and Loom :D
User avatar
MusicallyInspired
Posts: 1138
Joined: Fri Mar 02, 2007 8:03 am
Location: Manitoba, Canada
Contact:

Post by MusicallyInspired »

More big news! Steam has finally been ported to Linux! There are already a few already Linux-ported games supported such as Unreal Tournament 2004 and a few id Software titles. The first Valve games to launch on Linux will be HL2, Counter-Strike Source, and Team Fortress 2.
User avatar
dreammaster
ScummVM Developer
Posts: 559
Joined: Fri Nov 04, 2005 2:16 am
Location: San Jose, California, USA

Post by dreammaster »

Cool. I had previously downloaded the fan-made Portal Prelude mod, but hadn't gotten around to ever buying a copy of Portal. Lets hope it works fine with the Steam version, so I'll be able to play two full games for free. :)
User avatar
MusicallyInspired
Posts: 1138
Joined: Fri Mar 02, 2007 8:03 am
Location: Manitoba, Canada
Contact:

Post by MusicallyInspired »

There is only the Steam version. No other version exists.
User avatar
dreammaster
ScummVM Developer
Posts: 559
Joined: Fri Nov 04, 2005 2:16 am
Location: San Jose, California, USA

Post by dreammaster »

MusicallyInspired wrote:There is only the Steam version. No other version exists.
What about the original release that came in 'The Orange Box'. And I also think Portal was being sold separately for a while as well. Did they both require Steam activation during installation? Or do you mean that Portal Prelude was developed specifically for the Steam version of Portal?
User avatar
raina
Posts: 237
Joined: Thu Jan 12, 2006 12:31 pm
Location: Oulu, Finland
Contact:

Post by raina »

dreammaster wrote:What about the original release that came in 'The Orange Box'. And I also think Portal was being sold separately for a while as well. Did they both require Steam activation during installation?
That.
User avatar
Stryfe
Posts: 67
Joined: Thu Dec 25, 2008 8:27 pm

Post by Stryfe »

What's Portal...? :?
User avatar
dreammaster
ScummVM Developer
Posts: 559
Joined: Fri Nov 04, 2005 2:16 am
Location: San Jose, California, USA

Post by dreammaster »

Stryfe wrote:What's Portal...? :?
Xkcd: Cutting Edge :D
timofonic
Posts: 254
Joined: Thu Jun 01, 2006 2:18 am

Post by timofonic »

Indie games are a lot more interesting and creative...

Portal is a puzzle game... So what? It's nice, but just an evolved version of the indie game called "Narbacular Drop" that got later in a more polished and Half-Life'd version. Valve just cannibalized a bunch of indie developers and then they just trashed them.

You mainstream people, don't underestimate people that don't follow trends but their own path instead. Some people don't read daily a bunch of forums, blogs, RSS and such.

Go to the information diet way, remove that information saturation that makes your mind useless and non-productive ;)
User avatar
MusicallyInspired
Posts: 1138
Joined: Fri Mar 02, 2007 8:03 am
Location: Manitoba, Canada
Contact:

Post by MusicallyInspired »

All versions of Portal (all Valve games, actually) are Steam games. Even The Orange Box, Portal standalone, and any other Valve retail games. All of them still require Steam. That's how Valve chooses to run their games.
Portal is a puzzle game... So what? It's nice, but just an evolved version of the indie game called "Narbacular Drop" that got later in a more polished and Half-Life'd version. Valve just cannibalized a bunch of indie developers and then they just trashed them.
That's completely untrue. It was made by students and Valve saw their game and offered them a job at Valve after they were finished school. They didn't trash them, they hired them. They're still there now working on Portal 2.

Portal is a brilliant game. And fun. And in the end games are all about fun. Don't be so cynical.
User avatar
Red_Breast
Posts: 775
Joined: Tue Sep 30, 2008 10:33 pm
Location: The Bar Of Gold, Upper Swandam Lane.

Post by Red_Breast »

Hopefully this might kickstart developers/publishers who sell games on Steam to make Linux executables as well. More than just the few already mentioned like Valve, iD and Epic.
And if some start then more may follow.
And...
OK I'll calm down.
One step at a time.
User avatar
MusicallyInspired
Posts: 1138
Joined: Fri Mar 02, 2007 8:03 am
Location: Manitoba, Canada
Contact:

Post by MusicallyInspired »

Indeed. If Steam comes to Linux it'll change the face of Linux gaming forever.
User avatar
LogicDeLuxe
Posts: 437
Joined: Thu Nov 10, 2005 9:54 pm

Post by LogicDeLuxe »

MusicallyInspired wrote:(all Valve games, actually) are Steam games.
My Half-Life CD isn't. ;) (Not a surprise, since Steam didn't even exist when the game was released)
User avatar
bobdevis
Posts: 567
Joined: Fri Jan 16, 2009 10:52 am

Post by bobdevis »

MusicallyInspired wrote:Indeed. If Steam comes to Linux it'll change the face of Linux gaming forever.
Yeah, it seems we are getting there. It all still depends on if the industry can drop the habit of using DirectX by default and go for client-server-handshake DRM instead of rootkit stuff.

Hopefully the popularity of OSX will do just this.
Post Reply