So over the weekend me and the lads decided to play Mindustry (i think im addicted). Ive never been a fan of RTS games but Honestly been loads of fun. I usually play on the Ybox which is what i called by LAN rig. but sadly the motherboard kicked the bucket (it was a xeon 2697v3 14 core and a X99 machinist motherboard which ran gentoo). so i dug around in the closet to hopefully salvage game night and found ‘yeee old reliable’, so the cool part is mindustry has really low system requirements

Linux Minimum: Memory: 1 GB RAM Graphics: Anything with OpenGL 2.0 Support Storage: 200 MB available space

So me and the Bois played just like normal, except i was running 10+ year old hardware and you really couldnt tell the difference the system specs for the “shitboxPro” as named

Intel core 2 duo E7500 AMD RX 570 2Gb of ddr2 RAM Running Debian 12 with the Mate Desktop (i was originally going to install Gentoo on it but didn’t want to spend 3 weeks compiling LMAO)

it kinda blows my mind that this new of a game, granted its writ-in JavaScript and uses so little ram and runs on grandmas pacemaker. it kinda leaves me wondering what happened to the gaming industry? It went from excellent games that sipped ram to storage queued for a 200G update (im looking at you COD war zone). I also want to express my gratitude Towards Debian and Linux as a whole, this computer cannot run windows 10. I live booted just to see the slideshow that was windows 10 on 2GB of ram, and Debian ran really smooth. also shout out to the Dev for a great game that’s insanely optimized!

I would love to hear about other experiences you have had with legacy hardware and use cases!

Thanks for reading and have a good one!

–added note, my apologize for the bad punctuation and such i never was good at english in primary LMAO

11 points
*

That 10+ year old “legacy” hardware was practically a supercomputer not long before that, and there aren’t many things we do with computers now that we didn’t back then.

Sadly, developers and publishers have collectively decided that efficiency no longer matters, since they can instead pressure users into short hardware upgrade cycles, forever. They reduce their own costs by skimping on design and optimization time, and pass those costs on to everyone else. The transferred expense is immeasurable, as it includes money, time, wasted power, wasted materials, pollution, and is multiplied by however many users they have.

I live booted just to see the slideshow that was windows 10 on 2GB of ram, and Debian ran really smooth.

Yep. It warms my heart a little whenever I hear from someone discovering what a difference efficient software makes. Thanks for the story.

permalink
report
reply
4 points

Linux is so lean, it will run on practically anything. Windows, on the other hand, became an increasingly bloated sack of crap post-XP when they attempted to solve “DLL Hell” by keeping multiple versions of the same driver. The installation size went from 5 GB in XP to around 20 GB on 7, now I think a Windows 10 or 11 I install requires around 150 GB for the recovery partition, system partition, and other garbage.

It always amazes/disgusts me that on a fresh install of Windows 10 there’s like 50-75 services running and like 6-8 GB of RAM already in use.

permalink
report
reply
3 points

it kinda blows my mind that this new of a game, granted its writ-in JavaScript and uses so little ram and runs on grandmas pacemaker. it kinda leaves me wondering what happened to the gaming industry? It went from excellent games that sipped ram to storage queued for a 200G update (im looking at you COD war zone).

I mean, there are a range of titles spanning the lightweight to the heavyweight. It’s not as if all games are heavyweight today.

permalink
report
reply
3 points

MINDUSTRY LETS GOOOOOOOOO

permalink
report
reply
1 point

A friend of mine runs Arch on a GTX 660 Ti

Still runs very smoothly and his only bottleneck is his veeery old HDD

permalink
report
reply

Linux

!linux@lemmy.world

Create post

Welcome to c/linux!

Welcome to our thriving Linux community! Whether you’re a seasoned Linux enthusiast or just starting your journey, we’re excited to have you here. Explore, learn, and collaborate with like-minded individuals who share a passion for open-source software and the endless possibilities it offers. Together, let’s dive into the world of Linux and embrace the power of freedom, customization, and innovation. Enjoy your stay and feel free to join the vibrant discussions that await you!

Rules:

  1. Stay on topic: Posts and discussions should be related to Linux, open source software, and related technologies.

  2. Be respectful: Treat fellow community members with respect and courtesy.

  3. Quality over quantity: Share informative and thought-provoking content.

  4. No spam or self-promotion: Avoid excessive self-promotion or spamming.

  5. No NSFW adult content

  6. Follow general lemmy guidelines.

Community stats

  • 1.5K

    Monthly active users

  • 220

    Posts

  • 1.1K

    Comments

Community moderators