this post was submitted on 02 Aug 2025
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Still better than gog as they don't support any Linux pcs. All my saves are gone thanks gog.
GOG games work under wine (just not gog galaxy), did the folder where the saves are locally stored get corrupted?
The way things are you can't get your cloud saves unless you bother their support. I have switched from Windows 10 to Linux as 10 was my last OS. I don't support the way that Microsoft has forced AI onto their devices and security issues with the co-pilot. Wanting gaming to work just as well on Linux as it does on Windows doesn't sound hard yet it is missing quite a few things that Windows did. Such as being able to have any store run or being able to have mods work without having to run the command line just to install a tool that then doesn't work just because I installed the game using a different app store and isn't explained anywhere. Like why does snap install steam in a completely different place than flatpack or yar or discovery. It has been a headache just to get to where I can find a mod then download a mod and have a mod manager know where to look to install the mod into the game and be able to play it. How the hell am I suppose to recommend using a Linux disto to others that want to leave Microsoft behind if things are like pulling teeth just to get the same functionality as the OS that they just left? Sorry for the rant it just sucks trying to switch as a gamer that likes to mod their games.
This is not true, to my knowledge. Heroic can download GOG cloud saves on Linux. Upload them, too. There may be edge cases for games using a launcher or their own cloud save system, and some games don't support GOG cloud saves, but you can absolutely keep using existing GOG cloud saves on Linux through Heroic, which has at least some official endorsement from CDPR and GOG (they have an affiliate link that gets them some revenue if you buy games from GOG within the Heroic launcher with ad support turned on).
I get that it's easy to miss this because GOG itself won't advertise it, you just kinda... have to know to use Heroic for this and turn the cloud saves option on. But it works. I use it on a dual boot setup and I've been playing The Alters back and forth.
For the record, I agree on some of the pains of trying to daily drive Linux for some things. Which is why I dual boot instead in the first place. And I do agree the packaging situation on Linux is absolutely bonkers and only makes sense in that ecosystem for entirely self-referential reasons that don't matter to users and shouldn't be a thing.
You sound like you are wanting a Windows clone. It takes a tremendous amount of work to make Windows software run on Linux and that is before you add in stuff like companies deliberately making it hard or impossible.
Linux is different and has its own way of doing things. It is far from perfect but I think it isn't realistic to expect it to magically run stuff not built for it.
I mean, cross-platform cloud save support isn't about "a Windows clone" and has zero to do with Linux doing things differently.
Also, it is supported, just not by GoG. Which makes this excuse weirder, because presumably it's blanket deflection for anything that doesn't work until it works, at which point it becomes bragging rights. It's a weird way to evaluate how both these things work.
And it IS absolutely reasonable to expect software you need or want to work as a requirement to switch over. It's not the user's fault that the software they need doesn't work. If their needs aren't supported they're just going to use whatever supports what they need.
They mostly talked about modding. Cloud saves work on Steam. I don't know which stores support cloud saves and which don't, or which work with Linux.
This isn't most of what they complained about. They complained about modding being difficult. I somewhat agree, with things like Vortex not working easily with wine (though it can work with some effort, and needs to be running in the same prefix as the game). However, their largest complaint was just installing Steam in different ways placing the Steam folder in different locations. I think that's just a limitation of flatpak/discover/snap. However, you can create a symlink from wherever it is in whatever directory you want.
They key thing is, Linux doesn't work like Windows. A lot of their complaint (rant) was just stuff they need to get used to. It isn't wrong. They're just expecting it to be Windows, and it isn't. You have to be patient and willing to learn. That's it. They did it when they learned Windows. They just forgot about that process.