![]() It will probably be a few months at least before Mesa and the Intel/Radeon/Nouveau drivers are supporting the necessary extensions for this game. This game does require OpenGL 4.3 plus compute shaders, meaning that none of the open-source Mesa/Gallium3D drivers will work at this time. "Linux users please note: Shadow of Mordor doesn't support AMD at this time.AMD and Intel GPUs are not supported at this time." For NVIDIA users, they recommend the 352.21 Linux driver or newer given that's what they've been testing against. Particularly, AMD and Intel graphics are known not to work. With Thursday's release of the game for Linux, Feral warned that only NVIDIA graphics are currently supported. The lack of complete automation support makes this just a small comparison today and misses out on many features compared to when fully-automated via the Phoronix Test Suite, see: Reasons To Make A PTS/OB Test Profile For Your Software. Given the rest of the process is there, hopefully Feral Games will add that support in a future Linux update for this game, otherwise this is likely the last time this game is tested at Phoronix. It's a huge pity that there isn't any command-line switches for being able to launch the game on Linux with a -benchmark argument (along with the relevant resolution/visual parameters) to be able to yield complete automation of the benchmark process, followed by the automatic exiting of the game upon completing the benchmark and outputting the results. There is an automated, reproducible benchmark option for this game, but it's only accessible via the in-game UI and so far I haven't found any way to automate this from the command-line. Sadly, after spending the $25 USD and downloading this 67 GB game, I was disappointed in the benchmarking support for the game. Shadow of Mordor has a benchmark mode! I was very excited yesterday when hearing that, given my Linux game testing requirements. Included in these initial results for Shadow of Mordor are benchmark results for a few modern high-end graphics cards plus looking into the warning issued by Feral about the lack of AMD support. Since its release, I've been very busy working to get some benchmark results produced for this AAA game that's out for Linux one year after the Windows released. These are the steps you need and you can start playing the game with your gamepad controller once you have done with them.Yesterday Feral Games released Middle-Earth: Shadow of Mordor for Linux and Mac OS X. Close it and copy the X360ce file along with the other dll file created to the “file location” of Middle-earth: Shadow of Mordor once it is done saving.Arrange them if they are not working properly using the controller option.Click all the buttons to confirm if they are working properly and when doing that look at the display on the screen.Click the “Auto” icon to fill up the controller in order to prepare it for settings.Click “Search automatically for settings”. ![]()
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