Midsummer seems like a perfect day for a posting on GNU/Linux games! I decided to talk to my family about their favorites. My sons play these things for hours at a time, and spend more hours creating new game levels for them (a favorite activity, which free software games are particularly suited to, since level editors are almost always included). So, it seemed like a pretty natural thing to ask them, as the local expert game testers, what they liked the most. Afterwards, I decided to figure out my own favorites, and my daughter's (she's too little to answer for herself, but it's not hard to figure out what she likes to play with).
(Screenshots!)
Ratings
First of all, I asked each of my sons to tell me what their "top 5" games would be. Then I asked them to rate each of these games on four criteria: "gameplay", "music", "art", and "editability" on a 0-5 scale (5 being a perfect score).
Sylvan, 10 yrs old, gave me the following ratings:
Rank | Game | Gameplay | Music | Art | Editability |
1 | FreeCraft | 4 | 3 | 4 | 3 |
2 | Stratagus | 5 | 4 | 5 | 3 |
3 | Luola | 3 | — | 3 | 3 |
4 | Wesnoth | 3 | — | 5 | 0 |
5 | Neverball | 5 | 5 | 5 | 0 |
Dashes in the 'music' category are for games with no sound track, some were evaluated on sound-effects only.
while Nicholas, 8 yrs old, gave me the following:
Rank | Game | Gameplay | Music | Art | Editability |
1 | Wesnoth | 4 | 1 | 4 | 0 |
2 | Geki 2 & 3 | 3 | 3 | 3 | 0 |
3 | Atomic Tanks | 5 | 1 | 4 | 1 |
4 | Rocks & Diamonds | 3 | 5 | 5 | 5 |
5 | Mirror Magic | 4 | — | 3 | 5 |
and after a bit of reflection, I created my own list:
Rank | Game | Gameplay | Music | Art | Editability |
1 | Planet Penguin Racer | 2 | 3 | 5 | 4 |
2 | TORCS | 3 | 1 | 3 | 0 |
3 | PySol | 3 | 2 | 5 | 1 |
4 | TuxKart | 2 | 2 | 4 | 0 |
5 | Gnometris | 3 | — | 3 | 0 |
She couldn't rate them, of course, but my 3-yr old daughter, Ariel enjoys Planet Penguin Racer (formerly Tux Racer), Tux Paint, and the "Screen hacks" (also known as "screen savers", although it's been a long time since you actually needed these to save your screen from burn-in).
We also agreed on a number of "honorable mention" games that we all enjoy playing, even though they didn't make our "Top 5" lists:
Enigma | Xsoldier | Pathological | Pingus | Moagg |
Cuyo | Liquid War | Gnomine | Thrust | F.o.t.A.Q.* |
*Flight of the Amazon Queen, a commercial SCUMMVM game donated to the digital commons by its developers, and now part of the Debian distribution.
Comments
Afterwards, I asked them together to offer some comment on each of the top-mentioned games:
Wesnoth
(Alan Berg and his son Nelson have already written a nicearticle about Wesnoth in FSM#11, which has some screenshots).
What do you want to say about this game?
"You can recruit teams and attack other teams", "You can edit how much gold you have, what kind of group, and you can 'level up'", "Realistic looking weird fantasy creatures" (whatever that means).
What would you like to say to the developers?
"Can you add music?", "Why don't villages act like they have people in them?"
FreeCraft
What do you want to say about this game?
"Game where you select people and you know things they can do", "Pretty fun game in which you can control all sorts of units and make them go off and kill guys. You can't make Weapons of Mass Destruction like you can in Stratagus", "Some of the weirdest sound effects you've ever heard!"
What would you like to say to the developers?
"Add user save levels in home directory" (currently, it doesn't appear that FreeCraft supports per-user configuration), "Add more sound tracks", "Add buildings that can attack by themselves, like missile silos", "Why can't you make new weapons?"
Stratagus
What do you want to say about this game?
"Stratagus is like FreeCraft, only turned technological", "Stratagus is like what would happen if you took FreeCraft a few million years into the future, and got rid of all the fantasy stuff", "What in the world is a dorcoz?" (I don't know, either), "You can make guys".
What would you like to say to the developers?
"Add user savable levels" (i.e. same problem as FreeCraft), "Add help on how to get units", "Add the ability to design new weapons"
Atomic Tanks
What do you want to say about this game?
"Game where you have tank sprites and you choose weapons for them to shoot at other tanks", "can make new tanks, set difficulty levels, etc."
What would you like to say to the developers?
"Is there a way to add weapons?" "Add higher tech levels and more options"
Luola
What do you want to say about this game?
"Fun as long as you have a friend, but not fun as a single-player game", "Some options needed for any weapon to do anything", "Cows and gravity warps, dividing lines".
What would you like to say to the developers?
"Add more weapons that are cooler, like 'tornadoes'.", "Add natural disasters, e.g. 'Godzilla', 'Luozilla'"
Rocks & Diamonds
What do you want to say about this game?
"Game where you usually have to get to the exit past enemies, and you either have to play the original levels or make your own"
What would you like to say to the developers?
"Add more kinds of blocks/tiles [to the level editor]"
Neverball
What do you want to say about this game?
"It's a game where you have a ball, and you have to collect coins and get it to the exit", "Neverball is a fun game where you roll around a marble and you collect coins, jump over holes, and there are several different types of levels"
What would you like to say to the developers?
"Make it customizable?", "Give it a tile-based editor to define new playing fields", "Use an elevation map like Tux Racer?", "Why can't you have multi-player modes?"
Pingus
A couple of comments about an old favorite:
"Pingus user-designed levels are too hard to get to after you've made them" (I think they'd like to see a generic level-browser in addition to the current structured play mode).
They'd also like to learn how to add graphic tiles to the Pingus level editor.
We all agreed that there were also a whole lot of games we weren't giving due credit to. Both of the boys spent many hours playing Pingus, for example, about a year ago, but it's been displaced by Wesnoth and FreeCraft in recent months, so there's always some churn. I personally feel a bit embarrassed that I'm not into "more interesting" games—but I really do spend more time playing "Pagoda" (in PySol, a Hanafuda game) and the like. I suppose I just don't have the time for involved games.
Another interesting fact is that my sons spend probably the same amount of time messing with level editors that they do playing games. I think that's an encouraging sign—it's the beginning of free software collaboration at a young age (in fact, Sylvan contributed 45 levels to the Rocks & Diamonds distribution about three years ago, when that was their current obsession). All in all, it's a fun play environment (though parents should exercise a little care: it's evident even from this list that free software games can be just as violent as their proprietary cousins. At least they're all just sprites—none of the games on this list is particularly graphic, but do vet games before letting your kids play them).
Availability
All of these games are in the Debian GNU/Linux "main" archive, and are part of the current v3.1 "Sarge" stable release. On Debian, you don't need anything but "apt-get
" to install them and you can use "apt-cache search *
" to find these (and a couple hundred other) games. Other GNU/Linux distributions will likely have installation packages for most, or you can find the original source packages.