Farewell to Windows Tour 2015
It has come time to bid Windows farewell. Once upon a time Windows was the only digital world I knew. It began when I was young, during the venerable 3.1 era. I remember booting up our family computer into DOS, and before starting Windows I could start Doom 2 or Keen's Dream, or any number of other games. That was my first interaction with a command line. My, my, how times have changed.
From Doom 2 and Keen I went on to Baldur's Gate and Battlezone. I dabbled here and there in NES/Sega/SNES/Genesis stuff, but PC gaming always held my attention. The only exception to this was my Gameboy with Pokemon, because that game is literal crack to a 12 year old. Baldur's Gate held my attention like only a classic RPG can, and I remember pouring over the manual and this guidebook I had to learn as much as I could about the world the game created. Around this time I was also getting into Dungeons and Dragons (Satan's game!), so there was a definite mixture of digital and tabletop gaming. Battlezone, on the other hand, was introduced to me by my good friend Rob, and became a classic among my group of friends. Then, of course, Smash Bros became a thing and that was our game of choice. That and Soul Calibur; ah memories.
It wasn't until relatively recently that I ever even tried gaming on Linux. My senior year of high school I was introduced to Linux by my friend Ben. That spawned the interest, but it was always secondary to my true love of computers, gaming. Throughout college I had an Asus netbook, which was always my Linux machine, but I still had my Windows desktop, which was my gaming machine. Windows was essential for gaming: Steam; Final Fantasy 11 (yes, I know.); triple-A titles. These were "Windows Exclusives," unless I wanted to venture into console territory. Thus it remained, throughout college and my early-mid 20's. Then something magical happened: Steam came to Linux. That was the deathblow to Windows in my book, at least for my needs. I had long ago dropped my interest in many games, leaving a small but well-loved list of games that I do still care about. The majority of these are now supported on Linux, but there are a few which remain Windows only. That is what this "tour" is for; the last few games I want to play on Windows, before I go Linux only.
Featuring
The list isn't hugh, but there are some definite strong players:
- Dark Souls and Dark Souls 2
- Dishonored
- Duke Nuken Forever
- Far Cry 3: Blood Dragon
- Spec Ops: The Line