Plitch - Linux
Yes. And that’s fine — for . Plitch Linux would explicitly block multiplayer titles by default unless you manually whitelist them (and then you’re on your own for bans). The distro would include a warning on first boot: "Plitch is for offline, single-player experiences only. Do not use with games that have leaderboards, matchmaking, or other players."
Let me introduce a concept I’ve been kicking around: What is Plitch Linux? First, a quick note on the name: It’s a portmanteau of " P lay" + " L inux" + " itch " (that urge to tweak or cheat) — but also a subtle nod to "pitch" as in the sales pitch. Plitch Linux wouldn’t be your average daily driver. It would be a performance-first, single-player focused, trainer-native operating system. plitch linux
Plitch Linux: Could a Trainer-Native OS Revolutionize Single-Player Gaming on Linux? The distro would include a warning on first
For now, we make do with scanmem , GameConqueror , and running Cheat Engine under Wine. But a purpose-built, trainer-first Linux distro? That would be a gamer’s sandbox paradise. Plitch Linux wouldn’t be your average daily driver
We’ve seen a massive surge in Linux gaming over the last few years. Between the Steam Deck’s Arch-based OS, Proton’s magical compatibility layers, and native Vulkan renderers, it’s never been a better time to be a penguin-loving gamer. But as I was scrolling through forums about game trainers (you know, the Cheat Engine-style tools, WeMod, Fling trainers, etc.), I had a thought: What if there was a Linux distro built specifically for this?
— TheTinkerer P.S. — To the multiplayer crowd: Relax. This isn’t for you. We’re staying in our lane.
TheTinkerer Community: Linux Gaming & Open Source Software
