There's lots more to open source 3d gaming than just First person shooters. Most of them also have a linux version, provided the developers didn't choose directX for their game.
There's crack-attack, a tetris attack clone that plays well. There's also Glest, which looks something like Warcraft 3 from the screenshots. Kenta Cho has some great 2d shooters that use 3d graphics. There's also Armegetron, a neat Tron lightcycles game with decent multiplayer aspects. GL-117 is an okayish air force game.
If you know where to look, you can find a lot of good open source games. I think one of the remaining barriers to Linux gaming is a decent website that focuses on open source games. Happypengiun is neat, but the web design needs... a makeover. The whole site looks like it was designed using placeholder art and then decided to go live with what they had when they heard what artists charge for that stuff. The ratings system is a bit strange, not becaues it uses 5 starts, but that the ratings aren't tied to any specific version. If a game doesn't run, it gets one star, even if the bug is fixed the next day. And hardly anybody posts or reviews.
So yea, the games you mentioned are okay, but they kinda suck for similar reasons to the ones that plague happypengiun.
Justin Dugger
On 8/5/05, Josh Charles josh.charles@gmail.com wrote:
I haven't been much of a gamer, but I recently purchased Allied Assault and have become quite addicted to it. I was amazed to find that there are completely open source FPS out there, though from what I understand, the quality isn't up to current proprietary standards.
From what I can see of the movies, though, the gameplay isn't too bad.
Here are some links to check out if you are interested:
http://www.nexuiz.com/ - a FPS http://www.planeshift.it/ - More of a RPG than a FPS, but looks neat.
Enjoy! Josh _______________________________________________ Kclug mailing list Kclug@kclug.org http://kclug.org/mailman/listinfo/kclug