Written by Twin Earth
Table of Contents:
1. Screenshots
2. Installing on Windows Pc
3. Installing on Linux
4. System Requirements
5. Game features
6. Reviews
This guide describes how to use Steam Proton to play and run Windows games on your Linux computer. Some games may not work or may break because Steam Proton is still at a very early stage.
1. Activating Steam Proton for Linux:
Proton is integrated into the Steam Client with "Steam Play." To activate proton, go into your steam client and click on Steam in the upper right corner. Then click on settings to open a new window. From here, click on the Steam Play button at the bottom of the panel. Click "Enable Steam Play for Supported Titles."
Alternatively: Go to Steam > Settings > Steam Play and turn on the "Enable Steam Play for Supported Titles" option.
Valve has tested and fixed some Steam titles and you will now be able to play most of them. However, if you want to go further and play titles that even Valve hasn't tested, toggle the "Enable Steam Play for all titles" option.
2. Choose a version
You should use the Steam Proton version recommended by Steam: 3.7-8. This is the most stable version of Steam Proton at the moment.
3. Restart your Steam
After you have successfully activated Steam Proton, click "OK" and Steam will ask you to restart it for the changes to take effect. Restart it. Your computer will now play all of steam's whitelisted games seamlessly.
4. Launch Stardew Valley on Linux:
Before you can use Steam Proton, you must first download the Stardew Valley Windows game from Steam. When you download Stardew Valley for the first time, you will notice that the download size is slightly larger than the size of the game.
This happens because Steam will download your chosen Steam Proton version with this game as well. After the download is complete, simply click the "Play" button.
Face impossible choices as an alignment system models your morality and argues back—pressuring your reasons, logging your lies, and testing what you can live with.
THIS GAME WILL REMEMBER WHAT YOU BELIEVE.
An AI in charge of “ethical alignment” interviews you with impossible choices.
It studies your answers, models your morality, and pressures it until something breaks.
If you contradict yourself, it notices. If you improvise, it adapts. If you lie… it keeps the receipts.
Is there a right answer? Or just the one you can live with?
About
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Welcome to SciPhi, where alignment isn’t a buzzword—it’s the product. It’s your first day on the “morality module” for an advanced system that now runs large parts of critical infrastructure. Your actual job description is unclear. The consequences of your decisions are not. Every choice reroutes lives.
As you work, the system constructs a live map of your values—poking, prodding, and escalating when you try to paper over contradictions. You can justify yourself… for a while.

Key Features
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Outsmart an examiner that studies you: a narrative puzzlebox where the antagonist is your own moral model.
Face evolving trolley dilemmas: minimal, high-stakes scenarios that branch on reasons, not just endings.
Explain yourself or break: provide rationales, resolve contradictions, or trigger “dissonance events.”
Chart your ethics: the game logs your decisions and assembles a personal “moral map” you can revisit and critique.
Build the unsolvable: a fully integrated trolley-problem editor to create, share, comment, and solve dilemmas from the community.
Story of hubris and heroism: uncover SciPhi’s internal memos, experiments, and the messy history of aligning power with principle.
Why this matters
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We’re crowd-solving a hard problem: what values we encode into advanced AI systems.
Your data—choices, arguments, and custom dilemmas—feed into ongoing research on alignment.
All revenue from this game will be donated to Ashgro to support research on aligning AI with human values.
The clock is ticking.
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