Looks like Valve is working on a 64bit and Vulkan upgrade to TF2's linux client
Looks like Valve is working on a 64bit and Vulkan upgrade to TF2's linux client
For those unaware, the linux version of TF2 is still 32bit, and runs on ToGL - a DirectX to OpenGL translation layer.
A few days ago, Valve published a TF2 private branch called "x64_linux_test": https://steamdb.info/changelist/21975149/
Then a few hours ago, Valve update TF2's "App Config" to include references to x64 Vulkan TF2: https://steamdb.info/changelist/22010846/
Looks like it's coming soon, in theory should bring some nice performance improvements. But "soon" in Valve Time is... who knows
Edit: the beta is live
Update: the 64bit_linux_test branch is now public! Go test it! It can't connect to public servers yet, but it's there.
To opt in, right click on TF2 in your Steam library, then go to properties -> betas -> select x64_linux_test from the dropdown.
Some people are reporting a 25%-30% FPS increase, which is just crazy.
13 0 ReplyDoes anyone have more insight why it doesn't work with public servers? I would think that the network protocol should be unaffected by these changes.
5 0 ReplyValve probably intentionally disabled it, just to be cautious. I think all of the other beta branches are that way too.
7 0 Reply
baller
4 0 Reply
I hope they also work on a 64bit Mac client ... then I can finally play with my colleagues.
6 0 ReplyConsidering the CS:GO -> CS2 upgrade completely dropped Mac support, I wouldn't get my hopes up
11 0 Replyand apple don't support opengl nor vulkan
9 0 Reply
I hope they also work on a 64bit Mac client … then I can finally play with my colleagues.
Submission says x64 but Apple switched to ARM64, a completely different CPU architecture.
7 0 ReplyThanks to rosetta, x64 runs fine on M-processors.
4 0 Reply
This might have to do with the recent backash for the DMCA takedown requests and the resurgence of #savetf2. Knowing valve, we'll probably never know.
2 7 ReplyThe takedown was because of asset distribution. This is probably for a better Steam Deck experience or future proofing and they didn't get to it yet.
14 0 ReplyIt is to make the game bootable in the first place, you have to swap *.so files to launch the game as of today
3 0 ReplyAt least we get to profit from steam deck becoming popular. Games wanting to support linux more to support steam deck and stuff.
2 0 Reply