Written by Critics Arcade
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.
A precision rhythm arcade game where the music doesn’t begin until you earn it. Strike beats from four directions to build each track layer by layer, then keep the music alive because one miss can tear it apart.
PULSARI is a precision rhythm arcade game about pulling sound out of the dark.
At first, there is only a pulse.
A rotating nexus hangs in the dark. Beat rings rush toward it from four directions. You strike up, down, left, right — not to follow the music, but to summon it. Every clean hit adds pressure. Every miss tears all apart.
Hold the line and the track wakes up beneath your hands. A bass line emerges at combo four. An arpeggio rides on top at sixteen. By combo thirty-two, the song is no longer hidden. It opens fully, filling the dark with rhythm, harmony, and weight.
The 41 tracks span five sets, from an 80 BPM tutorial through corrupted signal beds, glitch fracture rhythms, ambient drift, and a hardcore finale at 250 BPM where precision turns into instinct.
Some tracks hypnotize. Some pull you into a trance state before the BPM jumps and the pattern bites back. They are short enough to replay instantly, long enough to swallow your attention, and sharp enough that “one more run” can become an hour.



PULSARI rewards precision without burying the feeling under noise. The interface is clean. The timing is readable. Perfect hits glow and ring out, with rumble on gamepad. Good hits keep you alive. Misses make the track remember what you did.
Four difficulty modes set timing windows from ±70 ms on Easy down to ±20 ms on Ultra. Independent audio and visual offset calibration matches those windows to your hardware. Full controller support (Xbox, PlayStation, Switch Pro). Keyboard plays on arrows or WASD.
English, 日本語, 简体中文. Single-player, progress saves locally.



30 cosmetic variants across five axes — sigil, aura, trail, hit effects, horizon — unlock as you clear sets, chase flawless runs, hold daily streaks, and break combo milestones.
Your screen carries what you've cleared.
When the hands move before the mind. When the beat stops coming at you and starts coming through you. That is the state PULSARI is built around.
Fill the void. Become the music.
PULSARI uses flashing lights, high-contrast converging geometry, and color pulses synced to the beat. Please use caution if you have experience with epilepsy or any of its symptoms.