While Terraria is not a visually demanding game, achieving a locked 60 FPS (or higher for high-refresh-rate monitors) requires a bit of configuration on certain Linux desktop environments. Wayland vs. X11
Decreased CPU and RAM consumption compared to running the Windows version via Proton. Terraria - 1.4.4.9 - MULTi9 - GNU Linux Native ...
To help tailor more specific information for your system, let me know: While Terraria is not a visually demanding game,
Terraria relies on standard audio libraries. If audio fails under PipeWire, force the game to utilize the ALSA compatibility layer by launching it via terminal: SDL_AUDIODRIVER=alsa ./Terraria.bin.x86_64 Use code with caution. Game Saves and World Locations To help tailor more specific information for your
In the context of GNU/Linux, where user bases are global but often fractured by technical jargon, MULTi9 is a bridge. It acknowledges that a farmer in rural Brazil or a modder in Moscow should be able to read the tooltip for the "Portal Gun" without switching to an English locale via environment variables. Terraria’s humor—its puns (the "Breathing Reed"), its pop-culture references (the "Phaseblade"), and its tragic lore (the story of the Dryad)—survives translation. The MULTi9 support in version 1.4.4.9 is particularly robust, fixing prior encoding issues with the Polish "ł" character and ensuring that Chinese fonts render correctly in the game's pixel grid without overlapping.
If you downloaded a standalone Terraria_1.4.4.9_linux.tar.gz or .sh installer script: Open your terminal and navigate to your download directory: cd ~/Downloads Use code with caution. Make the installer executable (if using a .sh file): chmod +x Terraria_1.4.4.9_installer.sh Use code with caution. Run the installer: ./Terraria_1.4.4.9_installer.sh Use code with caution.