

The difference is Aspyr is the company that is responsible for the code base on Linux. There were no errors or crashes in Win 10. These are high end enthusiast CPUs that are generally out of the price range of most gaming oriented consumers, which would account for low number of users with those CPU types.Īs stated in my original post, I installed Win 10 to test on my Ryzen 7 1700X system. To be clear the core i7-980X and the i7-5960X CPUs are Core i7 Extreme branded CPUs. Most consumers and especially the mainstream budget gamers are not going to be purchasing core i7-980X (6/12 cores/threads) CPUs when the MSRP is $999 US (wikipedia) and $1059 US (Intel). I also took breaks and locked the desktop multiple times.Īnyone running the Civ 6 Linux client, on the above listed CPUs, and encountering random crashes or the game randomly Dro: I purposefully dragged the game along by not playing with a proper focused strategy. I played for 3+ hours (more than 100 turns) without any errors. Policy saving, promotion saving, and start bias disabled checked, all other boxes are unchecked

I have all the DLCs and expansions purchased. I ran a test match in game with all DLCs enabled and all mods disabled. I placed the adjusted command string into the icon on my KDE desktop.
#Civ 6 news patch install#
I had to temporarily install Win 10 to test. The Civ 5 Windows client is unaffected by this bug. I don't have a means of testing this since I don't have a Mac and I don't run a Hackintosh setup. Since Aspyr handled the Linux and Mac ports of the game, it is possible that the Mac client may have trouble if run on CPUs with greater than 8 logical cores.
