Hey c/selfhosted,
we’ve finally done it. After years of people asking for it, GameVault now has its very own Web UI!
For anyone who hasn’t heard of it yet: GameVault is a self-hosted gaming platform that gives you a Steam-like library experience, but for your own DRM-free games. You host it yourself, you own your data, and you can share your collection with friends and family. Basically, it’s for gamers who also love the selfhosting mindset.
This Web UI / Cross-Platform Client has been the most requested and long-awaited feature for as long as we’ve been working on GameVault. When we first built it, it was just a small project for the two of us, written with the tech we knew at the time. Over the years, especially here on Lemmy, people gave us plenty of criticism for the tech stack and the UX, because you guys love to use linux. And honestly… fair enough. We knew it wasn’t great.
The new Web UI is our way of addressing all the feedback we’ve received and setting the stage for the future. It’s not just a nicer interface. This also represents the first building block for a new cross-platform client that we’re working on.
The Web UI acts as a cross-platform core, which means that in the future we will be able to package GameVault to run both directly in the browser as well as a native application on Windows, Linux, or even mobile devices. This upcoming client will be built on the same foundation, ensuring a smoother and more unified experience whether you’re on a desktop OS or just checking your vault from your phone.
Right now, we’re planning to expand the Web UI continuously and figure out how to handle the legacy windows desktop client moving forward. The technology underneath is much cleaner now, so we finally have the freedom to iterate and improve without being stuck in the past.
Anyway, we’re really excited about this step. It feels like a true milestone for the project, and we’re looking forward to hearing your thoughts and feedback. If you’re self-hosting and love gaming, give it a try, I’m curious what you think.
You can also check out a live running demo version on demo.gamevau.lt
Username: demo
Password: demodemo
I think you’re thinking of MIT though, the commenter was pointing out that AGPL is a license specifically made to do what you want - that people can use it in other open projects, but companies can’t use it in their for profit private software.
https://gamevau.lt/blog/2023/07/13