Had a quick look into this, this is the best related info I could find on the situation with Rust.
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The easiest example is probably similar to an objective out of the loop post response.
Really enjoyed this demo.
Some people didn't like that there was no voice acting, and apparently the devs said on discord that there will be voice acting added later (albeit not the Voyager actors). No voice acting didn't bother me, but clearly it bothered some people.
The one real weak point of the game is the combat, which was very average - but it has an auto-resolve button to just skip it on a dice roll with the modifiers you use (like which crew you use in the battle).
I still use reddit and had not heard of this either.
Apparently "it was a full blown movement that rocked reddit". Where on reddit? I feel like they couldn't point it out.
Doesn't it work?
I have a block button on mine, but I have no idea who this person is.
I feel like demos have become longer recently than they used to be. It used to be that you could only get through the equivalent of a level or two, now it's more like they last up to 2 hours - the same period you might play and steam refund a game to demo it that way.
Seems like a very healthy development in gaming.
I think you actually can
Sure, but from the end user perspective, it doesn't matter whose fault it is - the result is you can't play a game you otherwise just can in Windows. We know it's their fault.
If you never play any games with anticheat that's fine, but all it takes is one game, and then later another, and then later another, to make Linux a dealbreaker for many gamers. These are not unpopular games.
It can be the whole difference between someone sticking with Windows but itching to make the switch, and someone actually making the switch.
What good is 90% of games working if you have 3 games that you really want to play that don't work?