Linux GOG game failing to launch

Isn’t that what I just did?

Probably, but that didn’t generate enough information. When I run into these problems I run and re-run the installer to see if I can get more information out of it. Also when an installer hangs I try it multiple times, closing Lurtris and restarting it to see if the problem goes away.

Another option could be to get the master version of Lutris from github and running that one instead.

I restarted and tried your installer again and it finnaly installed the game, but sorry, it still doesn’t open and has the same log as before

Also, for windows games, do you know what “Path not found” means?

Ah. Progress. Kind of…

The path not found error is widely reported on this forum.
https://forums.lutris.net/search?q=Path%20not%20found

One user here mentioned reentering the path to the executable. Even when the path seems correct.

If it doesn’t work my next step would be to check what path isn’t found and verifying whether that path actually exists.

Gog Linux games use shell (.sh) scripts to launch the game. I can analyze the scripts to see what the script expects. But its always helpful to know which path isn’t found.

Reinstalling everything fixed the “path not found” but still won’t execute Mark of the Ninja. I wish Lutris had an option to just run the script without it trying anything because it works perfectly if ran from a terminal or double clicked.

Ok. Just installed Manjaro on an older machine I had lying around, installed the gaming stack, installed the game via the install script and ran the game.

No issues.

I used gamemode and Lutris from the repositories.

So it isn’t Manjaro and its libraries.

The only system options I have enabled are Prefer system libraries, Feral Gamemode and Xephyr Fullscreen.

That is the exact configuration I have. Crap this is so puzzling. Maybe I should retry downloading the game files again.

Is it still the exact same error you are getting?

Edit: the only difference is that I’m now testing with and old Pentium D (yes 2 cores) and an AMD 7950 graphics card.

Yeah exactly the same

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Playing GOG games on Linux isn’t as simple as double-clicking your games’ EXE files on Windows. While here are some GOG games with native Linux ports, the majority of its games are built for Windows. To play Windows-based PC games, Linux gamers use Wine, a compatibility layer 2048 cupcakes that lets Linux users run EXE files.The consumer buys something digitally and then, immediately, after a couple of years, they lose the rights and access to the game unless they have it downloaded prior to the shutdown. And this is what’s so important for us no matter how many games you buy on GOG—those games are going to be with you [forever].