Over the years, Linux has had little to offer gamers. Sure, there were a few cutesy games (such as one of my favorites, Frozen Bubble), but not many more. Then came Wine, which allowed users to play Windows games on Linux.
Nowadays, there’s Steam.
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Steam brings the world of gaming to Linux with great simplicity and choice. All you have to do is sign up, install the Steam app, and start purchasing games or playing free games.
You’ll find tens of thousands of games to choose from, including new and popular titles such as Manor Lords, Songs of Conquest, Hellblade II, Hades II, Mech Engineers, A Tower Full of Cats, Survival: Fountain of Youth, The Witcher 3 REDkit, and Rasant.
Fortunately, installing Steam on Debian and Ubuntu-based distributions is incredibly simple. Let me show you how.
How to install Steam on Linux
What you’ll need: The only things you’ll need for this are a running instance of a Debian- or Ubuntu-based Linux distribution and a user with sudo privileges. Once you get beyond the installation, you’ll also need a Steam account to purchase and download games. There are two different ways to install Steam. I’ll show you both.
The first thing to do is log in to your Linux desktop and open a terminal window.
Next, add the Multiverse repository, which offers non-free software titles.
To do this, issue the command:
sudo add-apt-repository multiverse
You’ll be prompted for your sudo password. Once you’ve successfully authenticated, you’ll be prompted to hit Enter on your keyboard.
Once the Multiverse repository has been added, update apt (the Advanced Packaging Tool for installing software) with the command:
With apt updated, you can now install Steam with the command:
sudo apt-get install steam -y
How to install Steam with Snap
There’s an even easier way to install Steam. Just run the following command:
Running Steam
After the installation completes, open Steam from your desktop menu. On its first run, Steam will download and apply a full update, so let that complete first.
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Once it does, the Steam account sign-in window will open, where you can either log in with your account credentials or create a new account.
After logging in, you can start playing all the games you want right on the Linux operating system.
Whoever said Linux would never be a viable gaming environment back in the day couldn’t have predicted that Steam would arrive to herald a new dawn for the open-source operating system.
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Give Steam a try and see if it doesn’t open a world of fun for you on Linux.
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