Plitch — Linux
Furthermore, this isn’t about ruining experiences for others — it’s about respecting player time. Some of us have jobs, kids, and 45 minutes to play. We don’t want to grind the same mob for a 1% drop rate. We want to experience the story, break the mechanics for fun, or test endgame builds without 200 hours of prep.
Tired of grinding for resources? Plitch Linux would include a background daemon that watches for repetitive tasks and offers to macro them. Mining ore for two hours? Press Super + R and let Plitch record/replay your input sequence.
: PLITCH officially requires Windows 10 64-bit or higher. Recommended Linux Alternatives plitch linux
The core philosophy: No anti-cheat handcuffs (because we’re not touching multiplayer here), no forced grind, and full root access to memory editing.
The way trainers "inject" code into a game is highly OS-specific. What works in a Windows environment often fails in the "sandboxed" environment of a Proton bottle. We want to experience the story, break the
Cheat Engine works under Wine, but it’s janky. Plitch would include a native GTK4 or Qt6 app called that integrates:
Imagine a Steam Deck dual-boot option: Stock SteamOS for normal play, and Plitch Linux for when you just want to break a game wide open. With the Deck’s hardware, you could map back paddles to activate trainers on the fly — “Press L4 to max health, R4 to toggle infinite jumps.” Mining ore for two hours
Yes. And that’s fine — for . Plitch Linux would explicitly block multiplayer titles by default unless you manually whitelist them (and then you’re on your own for bans). The distro would include a warning on first boot: "Plitch is for offline, single-player experiences only. Do not use with games that have leaderboards, matchmaking, or other players."