phanto,

This is such a short, sweet game, runs on everything: Portal. Even my mom likes it!

Alto,
@Alto@kbin.social avatar

Portal and Portal 2 are my go to tests for if a machine qualifies as "an computer". Basically, if it can run those, it's probably good enough to be grandmas facebook machine. Might have to toss an ssd into it (exactly what I did with an old core2duo hp pavilion), but generally I find it to be a good rule of thumb.

Plus it gives me an excuse to play Portal when I test a machine :P

No1,
@No1@aussie.zone avatar

Just last week, I fired up Portal with RTX (on Windows, I’m ashamed to admit), and holy guacamole, I think it stresses my gpu more than any other game in my library!

thequantumcog,
@thequantumcog@lemmy.world avatar

I am not a gamer but even I enjoyed portal.

Alto,
@Alto@kbin.social avatar

Surprised no one has said it, but Minecraft. I love it as much now as I did when I was 12. It can be as simple or as complex as you want it, especially if you start playing with mods. Then there's servers such as Hypixel which for all intents and purposes are an entirely separate game in and of themselves.

I'm sure part of it is nostalgia, some of my fondest gaming memories were playing Minecraft with friends, but I still find it to be an excellent way to relax.

(Tangentially related, anyone else remember when waiting 3 months for 1.2.5 > 1.3 was an absurdly long update time for the game? Different times.)

HopeOfTheGunblade,
@HopeOfTheGunblade@kbin.social avatar

Doesn't seem to be on the list yet:

Terraria.

I have hundreds of hours on my steam account, and I'm pretty sure it's actually thousands. It's a great game, and it's been updated so much since it released. When you could buy and hold gift copies of steam, I used to regularly buy new copies to hang on to to hand out to people; I've probably gotten ten people into it. Currently doing a modded master playthrough with my family and having a great time.

Unleaded8163,

Terraria is an absolutely wonderful game, I'm in the thousands of hours as well. It's probably worth a warning for a first time gamer that it can be hard to progress without a bit of guidance. If you want to stumble in the dark for a while, that's awesome, just go for it. If you want a little more guidance, check out the official wiki (https://terraria.wiki.gg/wiki/Terraria_Wiki) and especially its getting started guide.

HopeOfTheGunblade,
@HopeOfTheGunblade@kbin.social avatar

Yeah, the wiki is a big help, as is being aware that any item that has 'Material' in the list of traits when you mouse over it, can be brought to the guide, when you talk to him one of the options is 'crafting', and the empty blue box in that menu can have said items dropped into it for a list of all recipes using it, along with what workstation it takes.

msage,

Calamity.

It’s like a second game.

I can’t believe people don’t add it to the recommendation every time.

Finish Terraria, get Calamity, go nuts.

frogmint,

Calamity is great, but if you’ve never played any other games, I’d try others before running straight from Terraria to Calamity. If just for a broader experience

saigot,

Hard to say without some indication of what sort of thing you’d like. Are you looking for something to just power trip and blow off steam, are you looking for strategy games that make you think, narrative experiences, dexterity/reaction time challenges etc etc etc? But knowing absolutely nothing here’s 3 good games:

Stardew Valley has native Linux support. It’s a game about farming. There’s not really any consequences for doing things slowly so take your time and enjoy the game.

factorio is a strategy game essentially about optimizing supply lines. Programmer types tend to find it extremely addicting.

Baulder’s gate 3 is a Turn based RPG based on Dungeon’s and Dragons. It may be a little difficult for beginners especially if you haven’t played DnD but it is also one of the best games to have come out recently having swept all the award shows for both it’s great story telling and run mechanics.

If there’s anyone in your life who really likes gaming asking them for games you can play together or that they can watch/guide you through would be a great idea.

rtxn, (edited )

If you want addictive, try Stardew Valley and Factorio. I think both have Linux-native releases on Steam. I’ve got 182 hours in Factorio. The factory must grow.

(edit) ah fuck I fell back into Factorio again

Deckweiss,

I think other peoples suggestions are great already, so I want to contrast them.

I’ll suggest some of the good old free software games that got me into Linux way back before steam even ran on it:

  • Cave Story
  • Super Tux Kart
  • Battle for Wesnoth
  • 0 A.D.
ogeist,

These are my favorite games:

Hyper Light Drifter

Dark souls 3

Hades

Nier Automata

Control

Everspace

Hollow Knight

BioShock

Bastion

Transistor

Saints Row 3

Dave,
@Dave@lemmy.nz avatar

I guess you don’t really know what kind of games you like?

Some good ones to try would be Skyrim or The Witcher 3 or Fallout 3, New Vegas, and 4 for open world RPGs, Road Rampage or any Need For Speed game for arcade racing, Mini Metro for a casual puzzle game, Stardew Valley for a casual farming/life sim, Bioshock 1, 2, and 3 for a first person shooter, the recent Tomb Raider games for third person adventure, Dishonored 1 and 2 for stealth, Civilisation V (or any other) for turn based strategy.

Well, really just go find super popular games and give then a go. Easiest is to get them on Steam and they should just work on Linux and refund them if they don’t, though you can still play non-Steam games and you can check on protondb.com if others have had success (Proton is Steam’s wine-based tool for playing Windows games on Linux).

Linguist,

Steam has Proton now which is a god send for Linux gaming. www.protondb.com which is just a setting in the Steam client.

For games it depends on what might interest you. If you are into history sorta stuff, maybe Civilization V or VI? If you want more of a fun game that a lot of non gamers play, you try The Sims or Stardew Valley. If you want something like the current trend of games, try Helldiver’s 2 or Baldurs Gate 3.

If you ultimately don’t have a preference. Just browse the sales on steam for games that look interesting as well as browsing www.humblebundle.com which can sometimes be good. Just check it against that protondb or look up if the game runs good on Linux first before purchasing.

Sunny,

Probably check out Batman series, they run quite well on Linux, just been working my way through them myself. Otherwise Red Dead Redemption 2 I found difficult to put away once I started.

Most games will run fine through Steam, as long as you check of the compatibility box in steam settings. Otherwise there is Heroic Launcher, and Lutris as different launchers.

JulesTheModest,

Yes! That was my advice too. Most things work well, I’m using a 1060 and 4th generation i5 on a cheap 10+ yr old SSD.

Lutris really simplifies things too, I was able to easily install Battle.net and the Epic store too through it.

Jumuta,

Rain World

Deckweiss, (edited )

Thats a very bad recommendation for a first time gamer.

The game tries to be very immersve so there are nearly no tooltips and no ingame written tutorialization.

That means you have to be very game literate (know a lot of gaming specific tropes and conventions to understans whats toing on and what to do).

been_jamming,

I watched a very experienced gamer friend attempt the game after I played it, and the stereotypes from other games actually seemed to do harm. I think it also depends on your patience and problem solving approach.

Jumuta,

it was kinda a joke lmao

i completely agree with you

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