Would be great to try this on my pyweek entry if you're looking for games
to test, just let me know how it turns out. It's called solar flair, but
was developed with python 2.7 on Windows. I'm not sure on the compatibility
with 3.x. - https://github.com/lukevp/pyweek23

On Mar 6, 2017 12:11 PM, "Thomas Kluyver" <tak...@gmail.com> wrote:

I developed this a bit further, though there's still more I hope to do with
it.

It turns out that building a custom runtime is discouraged; the better way
to support game developers is to build a 'base app', which people can then
add their own game files to. I have prepared two different base apps: one
includes Python 3.6, and makes a download of about 30 MiB. The other uses
Python 3.4 from the shared runtime, so is a download of about 7 MiB. My
idea is that the game developer can choose between the latest language
features and a quicker installation.

My next step is to make a more complete example of using this to package a
game (so far, I've tested with the 'aliens' example that ships with
pygame). I might try with the solarwolf example on Pygame's Github org - or
if anyone wants to suggest another suitable open-source game based on
pygame, I could try with that.

Thomas

On 26 February 2017 at 19:47, Thomas Kluyver <tak...@gmail.com> wrote:

> I spent a while today playing with Flatpak, a new system for packaging
> sandboxed applications on Linux. The result is an example that can build
> and install Pygame's Aliens example game:
>
> https://github.com/takluyver/pygame-flatpak-test
>
> If you're running Fedora 24+, Ubuntu 16.10 (might need a PPA?) Debian
> testing/unstable or Arch, you can install Flatpak and try it out.
>
> This is quite rough at the moment, but I think it has good potential for
> distributing games to Linux users in the future. It looks like [1] Flatpak
> is on its way to becoming the default cross-distro app distribution
> mechanism for desktop Linux.
>
> The big improvement I'd like to make is building a dedicated Flatpak
> 'runtime' for pygame, including a newer version of Python - the base
> runtime I'm using at present has Python 3.4.
>
> Thanks,
> Thomas
>
> [1] https://kamikazow.wordpress.com/2017/02/09/adoption-of-flatp
> ak-vs-snap/
>

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