• Mereo@lemmy.ca
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    4 months ago

    People, read the developers comments:

    We know many of you are eager to play Ghost of Tsushima Director’s Cut on handheld gaming devices like the Steam Deck. We’re happy to share that the single player experience, including the Iki Island expansion, can be enjoyed on Steam Deck and similar handheld gaming PCs as we’ve worked extensively to optimize performance and deliver the best possible experience on these devices. You may notice that Steam marks the game as ‘Unsupported’ for Steam Deck. This is due to the Legends co-op multiplayer mode requiring Windows to access PlayStation Network integrated features. On behalf of everyone at Nixxes and Sucker Punch, we can’t wait for PC players to start their adventure and fight for the freedom of Tsushima! Source: https://steamcommunity.com/games/2215430/announcements/detail/4188987871078331986

    They strictly say that unfortunately it requires Windows to access PSN integrated features, so the multiplayer will not work because it requires said features. The singleplayer should work though. Since Concord is completely multiplayer, it needs the PSN features that only work on Windows.

    • snooggums@midwest.social
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      4 months ago

      Since Concord is completely multiplayer, it needs the PSN features that only work on Windows.

      So did they code themselves into a corner because of malice or incompetence?

      • Mereo@lemmy.ca
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        4 months ago

        It is well known that many multiplayer games like Valorant do not work on Linux due to kernel anticheat. Unfortunately, this is a part of Linux gaming life.

        • Mora@pawb.social
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          4 months ago

          games like Valorant do not work on Linux

          Unfortunately, this is a part of Linux gaming life.

          • Serinus@lemmy.world
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            4 months ago

            I don’t think you understand how code works. What are you worried about it doing, and why does it need admin permissions to do that?

            “Kernel” anticheat isn’t really any more dangerous than any other executable you run on Windows. Code from untrusted devs isn’t safe whether it has admin or not. Games made by small devs are much more dangerous than anything put out directly by Riot or Valve.

            There’s a lot of hullabaloo that’s seeded and encouraged by those who make money on botting and cheats. It’s kind of valid, but it’s not a larger risk than installing pubg or among us or any other small game.

            If you really want to be secure, you have to separate your gaming and personal machines, at least the OS and drives.

            The Windows limitation might even make it more secure in that way, if you’re willing to limit Windows to games and use Linux for personal stuff. Even then, keeping drives isolated is difficult.

              • Pika@sh.itjust.works
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                4 months ago

                I’ve seen this posted before, this is the first time I’ve actually read the whole thing. I knew what it was, and what it did, but I never knew about the “uninstaller” part of it.

                The fact that they doubled down and made an uninstaller for it that didn’t actually uninstall it and ADDED ANOTHER root kit + a backdoor to the system, blows my mind.

            • CileTheSane@lemmy.ca
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              4 months ago

              “Kernel” anticheat isn’t really any more dangerous than any other executable you run on Windows. Code from untrusted devs isn’t safe whether it has admin or not. Games made by small devs are much more dangerous than anything put out directly by Riot or Valve.

              Remember when Sony automatically installed a rootkit on customers’ computers if they put in their legally purchased music CD to listen to, that was a security vulnerability that hackers quickly found and exploited? Pepperidge farm remembers.

              Incompetence is just as dangerous as malice, and big companies have shown they don’t bother to take the care needed to protect your device.

            • Fushuan [he/him]@lemm.ee
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              4 months ago

              I don’t think YOU understand how code works. Having a program that you can’t verify being run as the highest priority level in your system is a stupid idea. You don’t know how secure it is or if it has vulnerabilities because again, it’s not open source. They are not even security experts, they are a game development company (which will hire security experts, sure, but the main focus not being security is important) and riot is not know for having a super robust game.

              Do you really trust them to release a program that can’t be hacked into, which then would give the hacker a way to elevate privileges into the highest security level? Even if you trust them not to harvest and sell private data, you have to also trust them to make an unhackable program.

              • Serinus@lemmy.world
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                4 months ago

                Yeah, I trust Riot and Valve more than I trust Sony or the developers of Lethal Company or Among Us. Even with higher privs than those other companies get.

                Because if PubG is compromised, I’m just as vulnerable as I am if Riot is compromised.

                I get the technical difference, but when you combine it with practicality, it doesn’t make much difference on one hand. On the other, it does remove cheaters from my games.

                If I cared that much I’d have ALL my games on a separate OS anyway. Maybe I will at some point.

                • Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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                  4 months ago

                  What are you talking about!? It makes all of the difference. I know a game can’t break my system, I know a game can’t erase files I keep under root user, I know a game can’t write outside of a very limited set of folders my user has write permissions, the moment you allow games to run on root all of these go out the window.

                  On the other, it does remove cheaters from my games.

                  Sure, because games that do this have no cheaters… What bubble do you live under? Do you think that games like Dota or CS have more cheaters than Ghost of Tsushima? Literally games that have a competitive scene which is so big that’s televised in sports channels don’t need root access, but a co-op map on a game does!?

                  And that’s without getting into the fact that client side anti-cheat is a losing battle, you could even have full control of the hardware and software and still wouldn’t be 100% secure.

                  • Serinus@lemmy.world
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                    4 months ago

                    a very limited set of folders my user has write permissions

                    On Windows?

                    files I keep under root user

                    On Windows? That’s not common practice.

                    a game can’t break my system

                    Is this like how you can’t get viruses without granting root?

    • notfromhere@lemmy.ml
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      4 months ago

      So are PlayStation consoles running Windows? FFS this is short sighted tying yourself to your competitor like that.

      • tiramichu@lemm.ee
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        4 months ago

        The point here is that the anticheat solution needs to be written for a specific operating system because it runs “outside” the game in a privileged way to try and detect cheating.

        So they have anticheat on Windows, and their own consoles will have a different anticheat system that is specific for the console OS.

        Running games on Linux via Proton is effectively an emulation or translation layer, and the Windows-specific anticheat is not going to work with that.

        If Sony wanted to provide multiplayer support on Linux they’d also have to provide a native Linux implementation of the whole game, rather than relying on Proton, which sadly not many publishers are doing at all. So its technically quite understandable why this isn’t possible.

        Now, personally I think client anticheat is garbage and they should not be depending on that as a solution anyway, but that’s a separate argument!

        • notfromhere@lemmy.ml
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          4 months ago

          Isn’t there some way to design the multiplayer to not trust the client? Assume the client has aimbot and all can see through walls, etc. Design it with those things being expected instead of all this draconian pwn the user’s system nonsense.

          • Revan343@lemmy.ca
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            4 months ago

            Server-side anticheat is more complicated to implement, so companies go with the lazy ckient-side rootkit instead

            • conciselyverbose@sh.itjust.works
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              4 months ago

              Server side anticheat also requires trusted servers.

              A lot of games are mostly P2P with minimal stuff actually happening on their own hardware.

            • Azzu@lemm.ee
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              4 months ago

              Server side anticheat is mostly implemented in all popular games. An aimbot however can’t be detected on the server side, it could just be a user moving their mouse perfectly. There’s lots of client cheats like that, which is why clientside detection still makes sense.

              • Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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                4 months ago

                You should read about statistics. An aim-bot will be consistently accurate, humans are not consistently accurate. If your aim-bot is purposefully inaccurate then it’s useless. Long story short, your cheating has to be indistinguishable from human, which is HARD to accomplish, and if you do you’ll lose 50% of the matches against other humans.

                Not to mention a game with server side anti-cheat could purposefully send fake data, e.g. send a position for an “invisible” enemy, if you aim/fire to it you get tagged. It can do lots of similar stuff that would make the aim-bot less accurate than a human, e.g. every time an enemy enters line of sight add another enemy just outside of the frustum culling, or send an enemy behind a wall that has no visible parts. Cheaters will act on that information, regular users won’t. At that point the only way to bypass that is with external hardware that acts on the same information an actual user does (which also bypasses client side anti-cheat anyways), at that point you have a robot playing the game for you and losing 50% of the battles…

          • tiramichu@lemm.ee
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            4 months ago

            Exactly, and that’s why I expressed the sentiment that client anticheat is a poor solution. If you really really want to stop cheating, you have to do it on the infrastructure that you as the game developer have guaranteed and trusted control over, and that is the server.

            • Azzu@lemm.ee
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              4 months ago

              How do you suppose to block an aimbot on the server side?

              • FooBarrington@lemmy.world
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                4 months ago

                Primarily by not sending non-visible information and by detecting unrealistic/impossible motion. If the aimbot has to limit itself to what humans can do, it doesn’t really matter anymore.

                • Azzu@lemm.ee
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                  4 months ago

                  It does matter though. If you program the aimbot to act as if they were the best human, the aimbot is still going to beat everyone else, same as if it was behaving unrealistically superhuman. But you can’t simply ban the best human from your game.

                  • FooBarrington@lemmy.world
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                    4 months ago

                    No human has perfect consistency, and it’s always an option to manually review data if it’s questionable.

                    What good is client-side scanning, when you can just run the aimbot outside the client and send the inputs directly through hardware?

        • LinyosT@sopuli.xyz
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          4 months ago

          Except we have a few ACs that work with proton. battleye and EAC being the notable examples.

          https://areweanticheatyet.com/

          The issue isn’t that the ACs can’t work. It’s that they don’t run at the kernel level under linux and so some developers have concerns that the ACs wont be as secure.

          Though given how things have been lately with MP games. You have to wonder if theyre even secure to begin with.

        • RecluseRamble@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          4 months ago

          Linux via Proton is effectively an emulation or translation layer,

          Akshually, wine is not an emulator!

          I’ll see myself out.

          • tiramichu@lemm.ee
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            4 months ago

            Mmn yeah. I described it as a translation layer also, which is more accutate, but I used The Bad Word because more people have an understanding of what an ‘emulator’ is in common usage and it felt appropriate in this context.

    • Pika@sh.itjust.works
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      4 months ago

      this is only mildly better then the conclusion jump. I am almost strictly single player, but the ideology of paying full price(which is becoming increasingly common to be 70$) for a game that I won’t actually be able to use all the features of… it’s not very appealing to me. Granted it isn’t fair of me to expect it since the company doesn’t advertise it as being non-windows friendly, but it still doesn’t mean I need to buy it. If they want my support, they will need to at bare minimum have it be proton/wine compatible, even if shitty support. If I can’t mark that box it’s a solid not buying. It’s a statistics case, if there are enough people like me, companies would change.

      • scutiger@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        I’m not even asking that they make their games specifically linux-compatible. I’m just asking for them to not prevent compatibility.

        I understand making games only for Windows because that’s where the market share is. But going out of your way to ensure they won’t run on Linux is a dick move.