Rocket League promised for Linux, MAME open source after 19 years, and more gaming news

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Hello, open gaming fans! In this week's edition, we take a look at MAME going open source after 19 years, SteamOS update 2.64 released, Rocket League due on SteamOS and Linux, and new games out for Linux.

Open gaming roundup for March 5 - 11, 2016

MAME goes open source after 19 years

MAME aka Multiple Arcade Machine Emulator was open sourced this week. For the uninitiated, MAME is an emulator that helps historical software from disappearing once the hardware it runs on stops working. MAME is now available under an OSI compliant and FSF approved license. This means the source code for is readily available to everyone – you’ll now be able to modify, utilize, and distribute it for a variety of purposes.

Read the full announcement on MAME website.

SteamOS brewmaster update 2.64 released

SteamOS released a beta version last week. After things went well, the changes were released as stable version 2.64. New changes include updated NVIDIA driver (with Vulkan support), improved DualShock 3 support, Debian 8.3 updates, and the usual security fixes. Updated installers are also released.

Rocket League to come to SteamOS and Linux

Rocket League is a multiplayer that lets you score goals while driving huge vehicles fitted with boosters. After a delay in previously planned launch date of December 2015, the developers have promised to launch the game on SteamOS and Linux by the end of June*.

*updated from original posting due to an update from Rocket League

New games out for Linux

CrossCode

CrossCode is a role playing game that combines the best of combat games and puzzle mechanics. Here is what Gaming on Linux has to say about the game:

The combat looks good, the graphics look cute, it has Zelda styled puzzles and it has good reviews. Think we might possibly be onto a winner here.

Kelvin and the Infamous Machine

Kelvin and the Infamous Machine was funded on Kickstarter about a year ago. The game is released in early access mode right now while voiceovers and translations are being added. This is a point-and-click adventure about the well meaning but not-so-brilliant Kelvin, his workplace crush, a crazy scientist, and a hideous time machine that came to ruin everything. Here is what Gaming on Linux has to say about the game:

I haven't encountered any technical issues in my testing of either of the versions, and the DRM free version even comes with a convenient installer, which is a nice touch if you prefer not to fiddle with the command line or move files around to get games installed where you want them.

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Nitish is interested at the intersection of open source, system software and startups. He loves to read and explore anything open source. In his free time, he likes to read motivational books. He is currently working on building Parseable - an open source object storage, log storage, management and observability platform.

4 Comments

Thank you for the Information!

MAME was always FOSS, only the license has changed.

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