Linux Gaming Advocacy

Beating the Wii out of Nintendo

President of South Korea thinks Linux can beat Nintendo. We do, too.

The Red Flag Linux Standard

To stop Windows piracy, all of the popular Chinese computer gaming cafes will switch to Red Flag Linux.

Creeping DRM with TransGaming

Could SecuROM and SafeDisc be coming to your Linux PC soon?

Windows XP End-of-Life Approaches

With the target date of June 30th fast approaching, the world braces for the death of the most popular PC gaming operating system and the shockwave of Windows Vista.

Interview with James Fielding from S2 Games

An exclusive interview with Savage 2 developers, S2 Games!

The GNU/Linux LAN Party

Technology journalist David A. Harding provides a feature article for LGW on a recent LAN Party, and there's all the details how you can set up your own event!

Entertainment Consumers Association

ECA steps up the heat in protecting gamer rights!

Contributing To Linux and Feeling Good about using Free Software

There is not one fan of Linux who hasn’t considered all the great ways they’ve benefited from Free Software and wished they could contribute more to the effort. At some time, you too have thought about how to contribute a “fair share”. Once you understand the effort required to produce high-quality, useful code, you realize there are hundreds of top-quality software packages on your own Linux system. Even though you don’t know all the package names or who wrote them all, you know a lot of work went into creating and maintaining the code.

John Carmack

John Carmack has not forsaken Linux! Carmack is in the talk of the blogosphere again, after an interview for a German website quoted him as saying the Rage project would not be released for Linux. However, Beyond3D has received clarification that perhaps the software may eventually be ported to Linux, even if it is not initially made available on the release date.

40 Million Linux Fans Can't Be Wrong...

As mentioned in our previous article, Make Yourself Heard, Linux gamers owe it to themselves to purchase Linux games. Good in theory, but is there real life proof this strategy works? Sat down to watch a DRM-less video this weekend and saw this quote that had to be shared.