![]() ![]() If you have a consultant doctor, you will want to place them in the GP’s Office as they are better at diagnosing illness than a regular or junior doctor. A good tactic is to build one near the diagnosis rooms like the X-ray or Scanner to help deduce the load. This room gets very busy as patients will return to this room until they are diagnosed, but not when they are cured. Usually a doctor in the GP’s office will be able to diagnose the patents depending on their skill set, but some will require the patient to refer to another diagnosis room to find out what type of illness the patient has. GP’s Office: Used to find out what’s wrong with the patent. Here you will want to build further diagnosis and treatment rooms as the patents demand for them. You start off with a blank empty hospital building, First thing to pop down is the reception desk, which is where patents will flock to when they first enter your hospital, of which they are then referred to the GP’s Office. Whilst its not an accurate simulator like Sim Healthcare, its still a lot of fun and has a lot of Bullfrog-type humor. Many older games won't work with new operating systems and the costs of rewriting are more than the potential income from a budget game, but if they made the source code open then volunteers could continue to develop the code and the original makers could sell the data files at reduced cost.A hospital simulation game from The makers of Theme Park. It would be good to see the original owners of the games making their games available as open source. It's good that through open source this game has been given a new lease of life and now works on Linux as well as OSX as well as the original Windows. In use I've found that CorsixTH running under Linux is far more stable than Theme Hospital was on Windows. You will probably want to go into the options to change the screen resolution and most likely to switch to full screen mode (which also makes it easier to scroll around the game). Now when you launch CorsixTH (it should be installed on the menu) then choose the directory where the data files are installed. Using a filemanager copy the HOSP folder to the ThemeHospital folder created previously. In my case the data files are on the CD in a directory called HOSP and I installed it into my home directory. You then need to copy the data files onto your computer. You can buy from various stores, such as Game or available online. ![]() Then add the following line to /etc/apt/sources.list (this needs to be added as root by using sudo before your editor): If you have a similar distribution derived from Ubuntu then this should still work (eg Linux Mint). The following archives are based on Ubuntu Linux. Installing CorsixTH (Theme Hospital) for Ubuntu Linux It should be possible to compile by first installing the original ffmpeg and associated libraries, but if you are happy with a slightly older version then you can instead install from pre-installed binaries. Github compile CorsixTH however it's not easy to compile against a recent Linux distribution as it relies on ffmpeg, but many distribution use the libav replacement which is not fully compatible (and specifically doesn't include the swresample). I'd recommend skipping down to the pre-built binary, but if you would like the latest version you can download and compile from: The open source version of the game engine is called CorsixTH, but it's only provided in source code which can be tricky to compile. It's a fun game with a comedy twist with made-up illnesses and humorous cures. You get to build the different rooms, employ the staff and engage in medical research to find new cures. In Theme Hospital you are the manager of a new hospital. I already had a copy of the Theme Hospital for Windows from many years ago and the open source version has brought an old game back to life as it will not run on modern versions of Windows. In this case it's an open source version of a classic which works on Linux, but you need the data files from the original Windows only game. It's even less that I'd recommend a game where you need to buy the Windows version to play it on Linux. ![]() It's not often I write about running games on Linux, although that is likely to change.
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