this post was submitted on 10 Jan 2024
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This may not be a Linux specific problem as I had the exact same issue earlier with Windows 7 and it's one of the reasons I installed Linux in the first place.

The specific game I'm trying to play is DayZ but it may not be issue specific to this game. It worked flawlessly untill this point. I had made no changes to anything. Basically when I try to launch the game it starts loading up normally and then just apparently quits and the "Play" button goes back green. No error, no black screen, no freezing or anything. It just stops launching the game.

I've tried checking the integrity of files, deleting downloads catche, disabling steam cloud, removing launch options.. nothing. Almost like it gets blocked by firewall or something. However I feel like it may be an issue with steam itself or then it's a hardware issue (I've got really old PC)

Few things I've noticed that may or may not be related:

  • When opening up steam it almost always used to download some updates first and check the integrity of them or something. Now it doesn't. It just opens up Steam. When I click "check for updates" it says everything is up to date.

  • The firmware updater shows available updates for my SSD and HDD but no option to update. I also tried with sudo fwupdmgr get-devices but it says "UEFI firmware can not be updated in legacy BIOS mode See https://github.com/fwupd/fwupd/wiki/PluginFlag:legacy-bios for more information."

  • In the privacy settings it says "checks failed" and gives me this message:

  • I've tried reinstalling Proton BattlEye Runtime but it wont let me uninstall it and says "missing shared content"
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[–] Critical_Insight@feddit.uk 1 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) (1 children)

Yeah I actually saw that on an article while googling about it. I ran the code but haven't managed to test it yet. Trying again with the different steam version in a moment. I think I saw something about i386 scroll by while it was installing.

[–] Para_lyzed@lemmy.world 1 points 9 months ago (1 children)

I spun up an Ubuntu VM, and while it won't have Nvidia drivers listed (since it doesn't have GPU passthrough), this should be similar to what you should have seen when installing:

Screenshot from 2024-01-10 11-14-42

Pretty much all those are i386 packages (32-bit), so you shouldn't need to enable the architecture in your version of Ubuntu, it should automatically happen (I didn't need to use sudo dpkg --add-architecture i386). Of course I did this on Ubuntu 22.04 because it's a VM I already had, but it should be very similar to 23.10

[–] Critical_Insight@feddit.uk 1 points 9 months ago (1 children)

Well I ran the code anyway so I hope that's okay. Really appreciate the help man.

[–] Para_lyzed@lemmy.world 1 points 9 months ago

Yeah, enabling i386 won't hurt anything. Has your issue been resolved, or are there still errors?