Note that the above libs may have different names if you are using a non Debian/Ubuntu/Mint distro, so you may need to adapt the command above to match their appropriate references. Libboost-program-options-dev libboost-date-time-dev libtinyxml-dev librhash-dev help2man Libhtmlcxx-dev libboost-system-dev libboost-filesystem-dev libboost-regex-dev Sudo apt-get install build-essential libcurl4-openssl-dev liboauth-dev libjsoncpp-dev Now, you should install all the dependencies, and they are many of them: It will create a lgogdownloader directory and get all the required files. Then, go to a folder where you want to put the temporary files, and enter: I was shocked that Mint did not have it by default, by the way… First, install git in case you do not have it yet. Let me give here the instructions for Mint/Ubuntu, but the steps should be similar for other distros. You can simply compile it from the latest sources, and there’s nothing difficult about it. If you are on any other distribution, like Ubuntu or Mint, you do not have to worry too much. Let’s see how it works.įirst, if you have Debian you can simply use apt-get lgogdownloader since it is now in the official repository. But if you don’t want to wait and hate using the web page of GOG to download your games on Linux, there is a good alternative: a full reimplementation of the GOG API that’s already available as a command line client, called lgogdownloader. As you may know, GOG (Good Old Games), one of the new distributors of Linux games since the middle of this year, is preparing a full, multi-platform desktop client called GOG Galaxy to be released in the near future.
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