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- Survive an elevator trying to eat you in co-op horror KLETKA when it releases February 19
- Draft code submitted to KDE Plasma turns it into a full VR desktop
- Proton Experimental brings updates for MonoGame, Rockstar Launcher and more
- Valve tweak Steam AI disclosure form for developers to clarify it's for content consumed by players
- No Rest for the Wicked co-op update lands on January 22 and it hit a big sales milestone
- > See more over 30 days here
- Casual/Social places for developer chatter
- simplyseven - Will you buy the new Steam Frame?
- eev - One-time logout
- Liam Dawe - Away later this week...
- Liam Dawe - Weekend Players' Club 2026-01-16
- grigi - See more posts
How to setup OpenMW for modern Morrowind on Linux / SteamOS and Steam Deck
How to install Hollow Knight: Silksong mods on Linux, SteamOS and Steam Deck
I think it's good that the KDE project is working on fully featured operating system. I'm less excited about the decision to use Arch. Nothing against Arch in general but I just tend to prefer other distro's.
I'm less concerned with snap/flatpaks/etc. to be honest. They aren't my favorite but I can see the industry and other groups moving to them. They make tools approachable for a general audience and I think that is mostly a good thing. The Linux community has been mostly shielded from bad actors and viruses. Sure we've had a few but nothing at the scale of the Windows community. Newer tools change that for sure, but I don't think they are necessarily a five-alarm fire.
With all the new users, the Windows 10 stuff, etc. it makes sense that there are going to be brand new solutions. It's cool the community is evolving.