RELATED: Steam Proton Updated To 5.13 Making Red Dead Redemption 2 Playable On Linux Nucleus Co-Op is an open-source project that is making the split-screen frustrations disappear, and it frankly does so with surprising agility and competence regardless of what your set-up may look like. So when Halo: The Master Chief Collection released onto Steam without offering split-screen (a staple for many avid fans when they were younger), an atrocity had frankly been committed.
RELATED: Amnesia: The Dark Descent/Machine For Pigs Is Now Open Source For Everyone To Tinker With Sure, there’s something to be said about the nature of PCs, where they are extremely personal and typically don’t have much room for two friends (or siblings) to sit side by side at a desk and stare at a 27-inch monitor while trying to frag, but there’s also something to be said for the sheer customizable nature of the PCs as well. The vast number of titles available for play right now on PC that doesn’t have split-screen cooperative play is frankly abysmal.