ui3bg4r

joined 1 day ago
[–] ui3bg4r@lemmy.org 2 points 6 hours ago

Update: I managed to create the symlink with the entire steamapps folder, to the point that Steam recognized the game as installed in /home while it was actually on /mnt. However, it failed to launch in the same way as it did when the symlink was not there.

[–] ui3bg4r@lemmy.org 1 points 7 hours ago* (last edited 7 hours ago)

I did now, it says Unhandled exception: System.TypeloadException: Could not load type of field ‘InstallerMesage.Form1+…’ due to: COuld not load file or assembly ‘Windows.Foundation.UniversalApiContract, …’ or one of its dependencies.

Does this tell you something?

PS: To clarify it is a rather long text that I get via the terminal when launching said game

[–] ui3bg4r@lemmy.org 1 points 8 hours ago

I did now, it says Unhandled exception: System.TypeloadException: Could not load type of field 'InstallerMesage.Form1+......' due to: COuld not load file or assembly 'Windows.Foundation.UniversalApiContract, .....' or one of its dependencies.

Does this tell you something?

[–] ui3bg4r@lemmy.org 3 points 8 hours ago

Linux mint, and I run the games via Steams. Indeed, I am aware of the DRM but the interesting part it only is a problem on the secondary drive and not on the primary drive. That must be pointing to the root cause... i just dont know what.

[–] ui3bg4r@lemmy.org 1 points 15 hours ago

Hey thanks. It does look complicated indeed. Maybe I did something wrong and I think I created a symlink and not even know where/how to remove it. I am not sure I am capable of that. I hope that someone has an idea of the root cause for this strange behaviour (I dont mean about the symlink, but rather why games need the primary drive to run)

[–] ui3bg4r@lemmy.org 2 points 16 hours ago (3 children)

I see. When I tried the last step to move the game from /mnt to /home, it told me that it couldnt move because the folder already existed (the one i created in Step 1)

[–] ui3bg4r@lemmy.org 1 points 16 hours ago (6 children)

Thanks for the explanation, i will try. On Step 3, shouldn't the game be installed in /mnt isntead of home?

9
submitted 16 hours ago* (last edited 7 hours ago) by ui3bg4r@lemmy.org to c/linux_gaming@lemmy.world
 

Both primary and secondary ssd (internal both) are formatted Ext4 (linux mint)

I am facing this weird issue: Some games, they play flawless when installed in the secondary drive. Some others however, they don't launch. I have to move them to the primary drive for them to launch and then they work perfect.

How come some games are ok on the secondary drive, while others aren't? Have you experience this?

Everything I find online points to a drive being NFTS format, but mine are both Ext4, default settings and automounting.

Games that gave problems on secondary drive, but are perfect on primary driver; Ghost of Tsushima, Resident evil 4 and Witcher 3. They don't launch, and in the case of RE4 it even said my computer had a virus :D or was tampered when launched from the secondary drive (non-sense)

[–] ui3bg4r@lemmy.org 1 points 16 hours ago

I understood they backport security updates, but is that also for apps in the software manager? For example: Currently I am using Mint. The VLC version there is 3.0.20 which is behind 2 years (current is 3.0.23). According to the releases of VLC, it indicated security fixes. Do these get fixes within the old number or are they neglected? What do you think? I concord by the wya on what you say related to rolling distro vs stable.

[–] ui3bg4r@lemmy.org 1 points 1 day ago (2 children)

And I never worried one time in my life about exploits in media files, it’s just extremely unlikely that between the time a 0day is discovered, and your system is updated (you do update frequently, right?), that torrent is going to exploit some player or media library.

Last time I heard of something like that, it was like 10 years ago, a gstreamer 0day that got quickly patched.

Executable files aren’t going to execute themselves. If you don’t chmod +x them they shouldn’t execute at all even if you click them. I guess it can depend on your system.

I am much more concerned about internet facing applications like a web browser or torrent client.

True, the combination of Media Player exploit + Linux + not patched, it is very unlikely. However, what if he is using a Debian based distro? Those may have a couple of year old version of VLC installed in the package manager for example...