I run arch and have never tried pirating games on a Linux distro before. Mostly just movies and music but I've run some cracks on my girlfriends windows install so I'm not unfamiliar with it. Would most game cracks run through lutris? Or would I have to download from some place like gog?
Most game cracks work just fine through WINE. You just need to get the game extracted into the WINE prefix and have the crack applied, then point Lutris at it and it will work fine. If you find a specific crack isn't working, you can probably find another that does, or crack it yourself using simple tools that are always Linux-compatible. I wrote a guide on using these tools for reference.
Ive only done a handful in linux. mostly i use repacked gog stuff cuz its easy and i don't have to deal with cracks. so easy that sometimes i end up legit buying to support the devs if the game is good.
lot of the time i also use firejail. haven't run into many issues with it so far (i think there was one game where i disallowed net access but it wouldnt run until i granted it) and most stuff works same as without.
I may be biased because I already know how, but to me defeating DRM using the community tools is really trivial and I tend to use Steam copies of games because I like the Steamworks features that I can emulate with Goldberg. Even when given a choice between a GOG copy and Steam copy, I usually pick Steam. It's sort of a weird decision for me to make for permanent archival because I really hate DRM but the DRM versions have more features (achievements, auto-LAN, etc) and are negated with a local DLL so is it really DRM at that point?
I deny network on all my games unless I have a good reason to allow it - almost never have problems with them being mad about it as long as their DRM is emulated/defeated. I use bubblewrap's bwrap --unshare-net --dev-bind / / as a command prefix in Lutris to do so.
Yes, and you can crack those yourself as well. Goldberg Steam Emulator works on Linux Steamworks API games, and you can unwrap SteamDRM from Linux executables with pyUnstub. Sometimes you'll need to fake a local Steam runtime for Linux games as well (Windows games can also have this problem I think, but it's much more rare for some reason).
Anything native Linux that uses a DRM that's not Steam-based is probably rare and custom.
They work just fine. You can either attempt to use the install script Lutris provides you and hope it gives you the option to supply your own files (this is primarily GOG games and source ports) or set up a new game from scratch by selecting the exe file of the installer and later changing it to the game.
You should check ProtonDB even if you aren't using Proton to make sure there's no additional fixes or edits that need to be applied.
Hi there! Looks like you linked to a Lemmy community using a URL instead of its name, which doesn't work well for people on different instances. Try fixing it like this: !linuxcracksupport@lemmy.world