38 votes

FUEL: I shouldn't be able to play this game

I recently had a hankering to return to one of my all-time favorite games: FUEL. I couldn't stop thinking: how cool would it be if I could revisit the game from the comfort of my Steam Deck?

That was my dream, but a few problems stood in the way:

  1. FUEL was released in 2009 and was delisted from Steam in 2013. (Thankfully, I have a copy of it in my library, but we're talking about an installation build that is over a decade out-of-date at this point.)

  2. FUEL still has Securom DRM.

  3. FUEL still requires Games for Windows Live, which was also shut down in 2013.

  4. FUEL is pretty mediocre unless you install the REFUELED mod.

So, I sat down with my Steam Deck and a hope and a prayer that maybe, somehow, I could get this game working?

Hurdle 1 wasn't even a hurdle. Proton is so damn good now. The game installed and ran flawlessly. I honestly never should have second-guessed it in the first place!

Hurdle 2 was also, surprisingly, a non-issue. Either the Securom servers are somehow still live and actually checked my CD key, or the dialog box lied to me as part of an offline fallback and told me I was cleared anyway (I'm thinking this is more likely?). Either way, I was happy.

Hurdle 3 was the first actual block. The game crashes when trying to pull up GFWL, which is pretty much what I expected -- the service has been down for over a decade now. Thankfully, there's an unexpectedly easy fix. Xliveless is a DLL that bypasses GFWL and lets the game boot (and save) without it.

Hurdle 4 isn't really a hurdle per se, but that's only because the Steam Deck lets you boot into Desktop Mode and get fully under the hood. I downloaded the mod, dumped the files in the installation folder, ran the mod manager through Protontricks, and then set up all of my mod choices. I then jumped back into game mode, and the game is flawlessly running -- mods and all.

I should also mention that I did all of this on-device. I didn't need to break out a mouse and a keyboard or transfer files from my desktop or anything. From the first install of the game to running it fully modded took me maybe ten minutes total? It was amazingly quick, and most of that time was me searching up information or waiting for the Deck to boot over and back between Desktop and Game Mode.


I realize that, in the grand scheme of game tinkering, this doesn't sound like a whole lot, but that's honestly the point. The fact that this comes across as sort of mundane and uneventful is, paradoxically, what makes it noteworthy. If we're keeping score here, I am:

  • playing a 2009 Windows game,
  • that was delisted in 2013,
  • on a Linux handheld device in 2024.

I also:

  • somehow passed the game's decade-old DRM check,
  • bypassed the game's second DRM system that has been officially shut down for over a decade,
  • modded the game in literal seconds,
  • and did all that using only a controller -- while lying on my couch.

From a zoomed out perspective, I shouldn't be able to play this game. FUEL should be dead and buried -- nothing more than a fond memory for me. Even if I turn the dial a little more towards optimism, it really shouldn't be this easy to get up and running. I thought I was going to spend hours trying to get it going, with no guarantee that it ever would. Instead I was driving around its world in mere minutes.

I'm literally holding FUEL and its massive open-world in my hands, fifteen years after its release, on an operating system it's not supposed to run on, and on a device nobody could have even imagined was possible when the game released.

We really are living in the future. I remain in absolute awe of and incredibly grateful for all the work that people do to make stuff like this possible.

6 comments

  1. [5]
    JRandomHacker
    Link
    I have to do this now. FUEL was... well it wasn't "a masterpiece", but it felt like it was so far ahead of its time. It feels like the closest comparison would be the Forza Horizon series, but...

    I have to do this now. FUEL was... well it wasn't "a masterpiece", but it felt like it was so far ahead of its time.

    It feels like the closest comparison would be the Forza Horizon series, but there's such a huge contrast between the complete wilderness of FUEL and the hyper-capitalist, hyper-influencer environment of FH.

    11 votes
    1. [3]
      kfwyre
      (edited )
      Link Parent
      Yeah, FUEL is probably a C- racing game (the REFUELED mod brings it into the C+, maybe even B range), but for me it was an A+ exploration game. I loved just driving around its huge map. A lot of...

      Yeah, FUEL is probably a C- racing game (the REFUELED mod brings it into the C+, maybe even B range), but for me it was an A+ exploration game. I loved just driving around its huge map. A lot of it is samey, but there’s also a lot of genuinely interesting and beautiful places to find.

      The Forza Horizon games have cool open-world maps, but I never felt compelled to explore them like I did with FUEL.

      5 votes
      1. Deely
        (edited )
        Link Parent
        Agree, I have very pleasent memories playing FUEL few years ago. My kid loved open world racing games at that time, so we both liked it. There definitely something very calming and unique about...

        Agree, I have very pleasent memories playing FUEL few years ago. My kid loved open world racing games at that time, so we both liked it. There definitely something very calming and unique about driving/exploring post apocaliptic world.
        Funnily enough I got similar feeling for Need For Speed: Most Wanted 2012, but not for any other NFS games..

        2 votes
      2. gpl
        Link Parent
        I remember being blown away by FUEL's map size, and I got it along with my best friend simply to explore the map. The main thing I remember is how overwhelmingly empty it felt. It was so big, but...

        I remember being blown away by FUEL's map size, and I got it along with my best friend simply to explore the map. The main thing I remember is how overwhelmingly empty it felt. It was so big, but so so empty.

        1 vote
    2. hobbes64
      Link Parent
      I kind of liked Forza Horizon games but something was irritating about them and you definitely reminded me that it was the "hyper-capitalist, hyper-influencer" environment. God there is a lot of...

      I kind of liked Forza Horizon games but something was irritating about them and you definitely reminded me that it was the "hyper-capitalist, hyper-influencer" environment. God there is a lot of branding and duebro consumer culture. It kind of reminds me of a Tim and Eric skit where they were doing an MTV-style show that was all shallow sponsorship. I found a short clip of that here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VsXL68Mw9KY

      I never had Fuel but it looks familiar, I think I must have at least played a demo of it.

      2 votes
  2. chocobean
    Link
    Bravo! I am also very pleasantly surprised by how easy it was to do anything on the Deck. When I did want mouse and keyboard, all I needed to do was plus the wireless KB/Mouse usb thingy into the...

    Bravo!

    I am also very pleasantly surprised by how easy it was to do anything on the Deck. When I did want mouse and keyboard, all I needed to do was plus the wireless KB/Mouse usb thingy into the Dock.

    3 votes