2001-2012 The company was founded on 5 September 2001 by Michael Simms when the similarly oriented
Loki Software filed for bankruptcy. Simms had previously founded the Tux Games retailer a few years earlier, and the collapse of Loki would have gravely affected his available stock. Linux Game Publishing had initially tried to pick up the support rights to many of Loki's titles, but in the end it was only able to acquire the rights to
MindRover: The Europa Project. It was able, however, to independently pick up the publishing rights to
Creatures: Internet Edition as well as the rights to the port of
Majesty: Gold Edition which was previously being developed by Tribsoft. Empowered by the addition of former Loki employee Mike Phillips, LGP released its first title on 21 December 2001. In 2002
Ryan C. Gordon (a.k.a. icculus, former
Loki Software) started porting the puzzle game
Candy Cruncher to Linux and he was looking for beta testers. The first Linux version of Candy Cruncher was released in 2002 by Pyrogon (an indie game company founded by former employee of
3dfx and
id Software Brian Hook) as a digital download. LGP took interest in publishing Pyrogon games on physical CDs, and on 10 September 2002, LGP and Pyrogon announced a publishing partnership for Pyrogon's Linux titles. Upon learning about the release of
Postal 2 in 2003, Ryan decided to contact the developer behind it wondering if they would be interested in him making a port of the game to Linux. Loki had previously ported the original
Postal to Linux, and he was interested in keeping the franchise compatible.
Running with Scissors agreed, and the finished port was shipped on 14 February 2005, with LGP initially handling the publishing of the Linux version. In 2003,
Hyperion Entertainment and
Metropolis Software extended their existing license agreement for
Gorky 17. Linux gaming developers Steven Fuller and Joe Tennies joined the Hyperion Entertainment game development team and they ported Gorky 17 to Linux, which three years later was published by LGP. David Hedbor, founder and main programmer of
Eon Games—an independent game development company specializing in creating games for desktop computers and handheld devices, ported
NingPo MahJong and
Hyperspace Delivery Boy! to Linux, which later were published by LGP. (the first version of NingPo Mah Jong for Linux, however, was released in 2003 by Pyrogon only as a digital download). Eon Games stopped development and porting of games for Linux and other platforms in 2005 (and later closed in 2010). In 2003, LGP began working with Epic Interactive, a German company specializing in porting and publishing games to alternative platforms. Epic Interactive ported
Knights and Merchants: The Shattered Kingdom and
Software Tycoon to Linux. In 2005 Epic Interactive has changed its name to Runesoft Entertainment. In 2005 Czech development studio Mindware Studios released the Linux demo of
Cold War. Cold War was the first LGP game published on a
DVD disc. LGP gained the publishing rights to several other game titles including
Soul Ride, as well as
Disciples II: Dark Prophecy. The latter has been described by Michael Simms as "LGP's
DNF" and "the game that refused to be ported" and has been said to have been the cause of several resignations from the company, including that of aforementioned employee Mike Phillips. It has still, alongside another long delayed game
Bandits: Phoenix Rising, yet to be released. In 2005, LGP announced the opening of their beta test for Linux version of
X2: The Threat. On 13 March 2008 Finnish game company
Frozenbyte announced a partnership with Linux specialist IGIOS Ltd to port and release
Shadowgrounds and
Shadowgrounds Survivor on the Linux platform. Both ports were later published by LGP, and LGP was actively involved in developing the Shadowgrounds Survivor port alongside IGIOS. In December 2008, LGP released
X3: Reunion and X3: Reunion Special Edition, which were first games using copy protection and the new installer written to use the
GTK2 toolkit and support for using XDG menus. In December 2008, LGP launched PenguinPlay, a new website for Linux gamers, allowing matchmaking for
multiplayer games, and
social networking. In June 2009 they began offering downloadable games and game rentals. In August 2009 they grudgingly dropped support for all
PowerPC games, stating that "demand for PPC versions of LGP games has been almost non existent". On 10 August 2009 Michael Simms confirmed that LGP is working on an original simple game based on
Sudoku. In September 2009
Shadowgrounds (the first LGP game available in Finnish) and
Shadowgrounds Survivor were finally released, the latter becoming the first commercial game for Linux using the
Nvidia PhysX middleware. In late December 2010 the IGIOS Linux team founded a new Finnish company named Alternative Games, which is focused upon porting games to Linux as well as to
Mac OS X. Later they will also port the Linux version of
Trine for Frozenbyte without Linux Game Publishing. In late September 2010 the Linux Game Publishing server suffered a massive hard drive failure which took down all of their online infrastructure, including related websites such as Tux Games and
The Linux Game Tome. Various other unforeseen issues caused the recovery not to take place until late November, with partial service being restored on 23 November 2010, with full recovery not being made until 8 December 2010. They have since stated that work is going well on their current project, and that they have a working build of it in internal alpha testing.
2012–2020 On 31 January 2012, after over a decade with the company, Michael Simms announced in a blog post, that he was stepping down as CEO, saying "you can't continue on a high energy rampage for 10 years without something breaking", and handing over control to
Clive Crous, citing his "unrestrained enthusiasm for Linux gaming" as his primary qualification. Since August 2012, LGP has started selling their games in stores like
Desura,
Gameolith and
Ubuntu Software Center (USC). However, early information about LGP games in USC had shown up on the
Canonical blog two years before. In 2012, they shut down the PenguinPlay website. In 2015, LGP decided to host their website on the Heroku cloud service and they closed their support system hosted on Tender. In 2013, LGP removed several of their resellers from their list e.g. Fun4tux, Ixsoft, Linuxpusher etc. In 2014 - 2015 LGP's resellers stopped offering rentals or eight specific games for download which used LGP copy protection. The website was brought back for archival purposes in 2020. ==Games published==