Tremulous: The best free software game ever? - Linux and open source software lag behind the proprietary market in the number and quality of available video games, especially in the realm of first-person shooters (FPS), a genre dominated by the likes of Doom, Quake, Unreal, Half-Life, and Halo. Here, Linux is an afterthought, if not ignored completely. Tremulous, a mixture of FPS and RTS (real-time strategy) written by Tim Angus, is an exception to that rule. [GNUs]
I've tried Tremulous a bit last night before going to sleep and I gotta say it does look like a great game, definitely one of the best in its genre. The fact that it's on a Quake 3 engine (which worked fine on my and even older hardware, and that's an onboard graphics chip) made Tremulous playable on my computer as well (of course with DRI enabled, which I certainly welcome.
I guess I'll be playing this for a change on weekends now, rather than Battle for Wesnoth. 
Cheers!
Daniel





















The problem with Tremulus is
The problem with Tremulus is that it isn't all Free - there is some non-free data on the download (maps etc.).
Sorry to spoil the party...
dylunio
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free data files?
Yeah I saw that yesterday as well, just after writing the above entry. What a pitty.
I suppose though that there may be a free alternative for these data files somewhere and a way to replace the current ones with that.
Anyone knows of a Quake 3 engine based game with truly Free data files?
Thanks
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re:
according to the COPYING file there are only some texture files which are non-free, most of the data are still under the CreativeCommons license. So it would be nice of them to clearly mark which are the non-free files, I don't think it will be very difficult to replace them with some other pictures
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creativecommons, eh ? That
creativecommons, eh ? That isn't dfsg-free, but not bad at all.
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It all depends on which
It all depends on which creative commons license it is.
Just saying creative commons is almost like saying nothing as there are many *different* CC licenses of which some as applied to software are proprietary.
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I've forgotten which one it
I've forgotten which one it is but it's free. Nevertheless it still fails to comply with the DFSG.
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see
see http://people.debian.org/~evan/ccsummary.html
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