WineHQ
Soldat 1.3.x



Category: Main > Games > Action Games > Soldat > 1.3.x


NameSoldat
Version1.3.x
License Shareware
URLhttp://www.soldat.pl/
Votes Marked as obsolete
RatingSilver
Wine Version0.9.44.
Free Download Soldat Download Mirrors
Maintainers of this version:
Description

Soldat is a unique side-view multiplayer action shooter game. It takes the best from games like Liero, Worms, Quake and Counter-Strike and gives you fast action gameplay with tons of blood and flesh. Soldiers fight against each other on 2D battle arenas using a deadly military arsenal.

Free to download, or you can register for $9 to get a couple extras.

Old test results
The test results you have selected are very old and may not represent the current state of Wine.
Selected Test Results (selected in 'Test Results' table below)

What works
Everything.


What does not
Nothing.


What was not tested
Features you get after regristration.


Additional Comments


Test Results
DistributionTest dateWine versionInstalls?Runs?RatingSubmitter
ShowopenSUSE 10.2 x86_64Aug 31 20070.9.44. Yes Yes Silver an anonymous user 
ShowUbuntu 7.04 "Feisty" x86_64 (+ variants like Kubuntu)Apr 26 20070.9.35. Yes Yes Platinum an anonymous user 
ShowUbuntu 7.04 "Feisty" (+ variants like Kubuntu)Apr 16 20070.9.35. Yes Yes Platinum Brian 
CurrentDebian GNU/Linux Unstable "Sid"Apr 06 20070.9.34. Yes Yes Gold an anonymous user 
ShowUbuntu 7.04 "Feisty" (+ variants like Kubuntu)May 03 20070.9.33. Yes Yes Silver an anonymous user 


Known bugs
Bug # Description Status Resolution Other apps affected
7974 soldat: input configuration doesn't work NEW View
14592 Soldat Performance Spikes NEW View

 
HOWTO

Soldat should install and run correctly using the latest version of Wine (which, at the time of writing, is 0.9.19).

1. You probably wanna head on over to the Soldat site to download it.

2. Then unzip the setup into your home folder, pop into a terminal and do your "wine soldat131.exe"

3. Install it like normal.

That's it, you're done! 

Once installation is complete you may want to use the Setup to configure Soldat to work a little better.

Tips:

  • Graphics - You may want to disable fullscreen and antialiasing, and maybe use 16 bitrate until you see that Soldat works correctly
  • Sound - Soldat may start up with an access violation. This is usually caused by a funky sound setting. First set your sound to ALSA in winecfg. You may also want to try different things under the "Sound Output Type" section in the Soldat Config, and if none of those configurations work, you can just disable sound under "Sound Driver List"
  • Performance - Particles on screen can be lessened to increase framerate. Disabling "Render Smooth Polygons" seems to speed up some things as well.
  • Network and More - changing settings in here had no difference on my game.

Soldat should be started with the following command, as without it, Soldat will spit many FIXME errors:

WINEDBUG=-all wine 'C:\Soldat\Soldat.exe'

Once you're ingame, everything should work. However, it should be noted that you can't play if you are running XGL.

AS OF WINE 0.9.35, Soldat text works! Now rated Platinum!

However, using an older version of Wine, you may noticed that text is garbled. There are 3 known workaround for this:

(1). Run "regedit" in a terminal, go into the HKEY_CURRENT_USER -> Software -> Wine -> X11 Driver section. If there isn't an "X11 Driver" section, just create a new key on the "Wine" folder. After you are in the "X11 Driver" key, you need to create 4 strings values, with names:
ClientSideAntiAliasWithCore
ClientSideAntiAliasWithRender
ClientSideWithCore
ClientSideWithRender

and have them all set to N. This will make Soldat render the fonts differently or something, and can look really ugly, but they are all readable.

(2) Replace the fonts in the Soldat directory:

cd [gamedir]
cp /var/lib/defoma/gs.d/dirs/fonts/FreeSans.ttf lucon.ttf
cp /var/lib/defoma/gs.d/dirs/fonts/FreeSans.ttf bgothl.ttf

Or find whatever font you want, instead of the FreeSans used here.

(3). Use this little hack here...

(4). Deleting the 2 fonts (lucon and bgothl.ttf) were reported to work as well.

There is 1 bug left, with changing the controls from the defaults. Just copy-pasting what was said for the 1.3 version:

"The interface for setting controls is glitchy - you click on the button and sometimes where it would normally ask you to press a key it just says 'Key OK'. However, you can edit the [CONTROLS] section of soldat.ini - you need to enter scancodes. But not actual scancodes... they must go through a level of translation through linux/wine or this section wouldn't be so complicated. There's a nice image of scancodes at barcodeman.com BUT you need to subtract 1 from those numbers, or 2 for the bottom row. Eg, I have 'e' as right, 'o' as crouch and ',' as jump, so I put 'Right=18', 'Crouch=24' and 'Jump=51' into my soldat.ini (I use a dvorak layout so that's not as retarded as it sounds)."

Also, it seems this input bug still rears its head at times. Mouse and Keyboard seem to not work at times. A reported fix for it is to type: wineprefixcreate

ALTERNATE WINE INSTALL:

Sometimes WINE doesn't seem to work right, so I've had a GIT version of it lying around for testing, but it also serves as a more rreliable backup for when something goes wrong in my current system install. To use a GIT version of WINE, please read this wiki page. The following are mainly Ubuntu instructions:

1. sudo apt-get install git git-core

2. Try getting your GIT version of WINE:

git clone git://source.winehq.org/git/wine.git wine-git
cd wine-git

Note: You may get some error message that begins with: "git, the filemanager with GNU Interactive Tools, is now called gitfm." If you do, then you should run, as it says: "update-alternatives --config git" and there should be 2 options now, the second probably being that git-core you downloaded. If can't get git-core, there is another one called cotigo, in which case you can install, select that one, and swap the first command above for a: "cg clone git://source.winehq.org/git/wine.git wine-git".

3. "sudo apt-get build-dep wine", that way you get all the dependencies you need to compile WINE,

4. "./configure && make clean && make depend && make", to build your GIT WINE :)

There are a lot of things you can do in GIT, like regression testing, setting WINE to specific versions, or just update to get the very latest WINE, but you'd probably want to read through the wiki linked above for more info.



 
Wine 0.9+

Something to mention, is that the 4869 bug only seems to occur in versions of Wine 0.9.1 through 0.9.17. 0.9.18 does NOT work with Soldat, and 0.9.19 has fixed the bug, but had a new input bug when installed on Dapper. Bug was marked invalid, but be wary incase it does come up.


 
WARNING

Soldat does NOT startup in Wine 0.9.18.

Soldat MIGHT NOT function properly if running XGL. I currently run Ubuntu Edgy with Beryl (using built-in AIGLX, not XGL) and it DOES work. Your results may vary.


 

The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. WineHQ is not responsible for what they say.

keyboard change,How?
by saltcushy on Thursday February 7th 2013, 14:56
I'd like change random config keyboard's . I using PlayOnLInux, Possible is ts?

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Still lags very much
by Vladimir Bychkoff on Tuesday January 15th 2008, 6:53
I did it like it is written here, but it still lags very much when I connect to any server (without BE too) =\ Disabled sound at all but didn't help

Soldat 1.4.2; Ubutu 7.10 Gutsy Gibbon i386; wine 0.9.46; GeForce4 MX440 64 mb; nvidia driver: 96.43.01

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Merge?
by Brian on Tuesday January 1st 2008, 7:09
Hey guys, I don't know how many people still play 1.3.x but I was wondering whether we should just focus on 1.4.x now, close this version and have all the votes shifted up into the newer version? Soldat 1.3.x is on the top of the Platinum list, which is kind of funny, because it's not the latest version (which for me, works perfectly as well). What do you think?

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Help with install
by hytham on Thursday May 17th 2007, 18:07
when i try installing i get this error in terminal

jigglemaster7@jigglemaster7-laptop:~$ wine /home/jigglemaster7/soldatsetup.exefixme:reg:GetNativeSystemInfo (0x34fea0) using GetSystemInfo()
fixme:process:IsWow64Process (0xffffffff 0x34fe9c) stub!
fixme:advapi:CheckTokenMembership ((nil) 0x16e1c8 0x34fe1c) stub!
wine: Call from 0x7b842690 to unimplemented function shell32.dll.SHPathPrepareForWriteA, aborting

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resolution
by skoruppa on Tuesday January 30th 2007, 15:49
Hugh Li: your post are funny :P

why i must do that stupid file? i just run soldat that
wine soldat.exe && xrandr -s 0 and resolution are changing automatical without that bin/sh launcher ;)

[post new] [reply to this]

Automated screen resolution script
by Hugh Li on Thursday January 25th 2007, 0:36
Since I found out that Soldat can only run at 640x480, I decided to find a way to automate changing screen resolutions, so I could bypass going through menus and and then clicking on "keep resolution" each time. After googling, I found out that I could automate it by a script. Since I'm a Linux noob (I've only had Ubuntu for less than a month), I'm not entirely sure if it'll work for other people, but at least you could tell what to do and reimplement it.

(BTW, I'm running Ubuntu Dapper, with Wine 0.9.29)

1. Right click on desktop > create document > empty file

2. Open it with a text editor, and paste this in:
(don't include the dotted lines before and after the text)

----------------------------------------------------------------------

#!/bin/sh

#First change the resolution to fit Soldat (do not change line):
xrandr -s 640x480

#Then start the program (change this line):
wine "/path/to/soldat/folder/soldat.exe"

#Wait until after the program exits to finish the script:
wait

#After the program exits it should fire off this code to reset
#your screen resolution (change the resolution if you need to):
xrandr -s 1280x1024

----------------------------------------------------------------------

The path to "soldat.exe" (since one of the folders on the path had a space in it, I had to put quotes around the path) should be changed accordingly, and you might want to change the last screen resolution too, if you don't usually use a resolution of 1280x1024.

3. Save the file with a easy, simple to remember filename ending in ".sh" (I named mine 'soldat.sh" and you migth want to as well, you'll know why)

4. Move the file to your "Home" folder - Usually "/home/*username*"

Now you're finished! If you want to run Soldat now, just open up your terminal, and run "sh soldat.sh" (or whatever you named your script file earlier). Your screen resolution should change to 640x480, and start Soldat. After you exit Soldat, the resolution should automatically set to whatever you set it as in the script file.

I also recommend you change wine's settings (winecfg) by going to the graphics tab and unchecking the box labelled 'emulate a virtual desktop', as the window kinda messed things for me.

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