Lutris

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lutris
Lutris Logo
The Lutris Otter
Developer(s)Community
Mathieu Comandon
Stable release
0.5.9.1 / October 16, 2021; 4 months ago (2021-10-16)[1]
Repositorygithub.com/lutris/lutris
Written inPython, GObject
Operating systemLinux
Available inEnglish
LicenseGNU General Public License
Websitelutris.net

Lutris is a free and open source game manager for Linux-based operating systems developed and maintained by Mathieu Comandon and the community,[2] released under the GNU General Public License.[3]

For games that require using Wine, community installer scripts are available that automatically configure the Wine environment. Lutris also offers integration for software purchased from GOG, Humble Bundle, Steam, and Epic Games Store; those can be launched directly through the Lutris application. [4] Additionally, Lutris supports over 20 emulators including DOSBox, ScummVM, MAME, Snes9x, Dolphin, PCSX2 and PPSSPP.[5]

Features[]

Lutris can pull games from various services and vendors, native Linux games, browser games, and emulated games and launch them all from one place. These different services or sources are called runners and are used to aggregate the games in one place. All the games installed through these sources are listed in user's Lutris window, and can be launched, uninstalled, and tweaked from there.

It allows users to install games directly from a huge online library of user contributed scripts. These make installing games on Linux very easy, with a few clicks, especially those using Wine and that need tweaks, registry entries, or specific tools to run correctly. Games can be installed either through the Lutris website or through the app itself. During installation, Lutris takes care of all the setup: installing the right Wine version, the right tweaks, creating the folder structure, enabling DXVk, or whatever other tools the game needs to run. This makes Lutris particularly useful for installing Windows games, because there is no need to run the installer through Wine, creating a new prefix, using winetricks to set some things up, or running command lines - all of that is done by Lutris. Some games offer multiple installation options, either to install the game from various sources (like Steam or GOG) or to offer various install scripts that might work better or worse on a user's hardware. Lutris displays ratings for these scripts, and some additional instructions one might need that Lutris can't handle itself, like installing dependencies. Lutris allows the user to tweak settings for each game and runner. While games installed with a Lutris install script won't need these, since they’ll apply them all for the user, games that someone installs manually or through steam might benefit from a few tweaks. Users can enable or disable DXVK or VKD3D for Direct X Games, enable Feral Gamemode, Esync, or even tell the game to run at a specific resolution or in a virtual desktop. Users can also choose the Wine version they’ll use, and download new ones from the Wine runner options.

In 2013, when Steam support was first added to Lutris, OMG! Ubuntu![6] noted that the database of Lutris games had thus far been limited. They also noted that while it was possible to submit installers for the Lutris database, each addition needed to be manually approved by the Lutris development team.

History[]

Lutris began as a piece of software called Oblivion Launcher,[citation needed] which was created in 2009 by Mathieu Comandon. He wanted an easier way to manage his games running on Linux, especially the ones that ran using Wine. Lutris began development on Launchpad, with the repository being created on May 5th, 2009. The first public release, 0.1, was on November 29th, 2009.[7] In 2010, development moved to GitHub. The first commit was pushed to the Lutris GitHub repository in January, 2010.

References[]

  1. ^ "releases". GitHub. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
  2. ^ "About Lutris". lutris.net. Retrieved 16 June 2019.
  3. ^ Lutris desktop client in Python, Lutris, 16 June 2019, retrieved 16 June 2019
  4. ^ "Lutris Open Gaming Platform New Release". GamingOnLinux. Retrieved 31 December 2017.
  5. ^ "Some of The Popular Gaming Platforms For Linux". LinuxAndUbuntu. Retrieved 26 January 2022.
  6. ^ "Steam Support Added to Open Gaming Platform 'Lutris' - OMG! Ubuntu!". Retrieved 31 December 2017.
  7. ^ "Download Lutris". Archived from the original on 2 December 2009.

See also[]

Retrieved from ""