• Max-P
    link
    fedilink
    401 month ago

    It’s the same as glxgears but for EGL and Wayland. It tests that OpenGL works.

    • TimeSquirrel
      link
      fedilink
      271 month ago

      Year 2070: A young man in a dirty, run down, four mile tall high-rise reaching into the smog and covered in holographic ads and QR code graffiti lays down and plugs his newly upgraded gaming system into the port in the back of his head, closes his eyes, and enters the virtual realm for some much needed reality escape. He tests his hardware by running glxgears. The toothed discs appear before him in the empty void, spinning smoothly and silently, assuring him that in a few moments, he can imagine a different life, if only for just a few hours.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        171 month ago

        besides the head socket; this was me in 2005 as a lowly IT analyst with an entire laboratory’s worth of screens displaying glxgears 6 days per week making sure all of the workstations’ display drivers were working correctly before deploying them to the engineers. that 6th day was me coming in on a saturday or sunday to take advantage of the REALLY nice and expensive hardware to try out the few games that worked on linux at the time. lol

        • @Vikthor
          link
          41 month ago

          Enemy Territory, running on id Tech 3 engine, worked pretty well for what I remember.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        4
        edit-2
        1 month ago

        Amazing, I read this in a deep narrator voice and now I want a tale of a game engine developer living in a stereotypical dystopian cyberpunk society