![]() I'd be grateful if you can give me some feedback here in this thread, like how it works for you in your distro, etc. If you find any issue specific to the AppImage, you can report it in the issue tracker to see if there's something we can do to solve it. Note that I've only tested them with my host OS, don't know about other distros. Very convenient, isn't it? In combination with Gitlab CI, I managed to automate the creation of AppImages through pipelines. 2 Answers Sorted by: 3 If youre using ubuntu 20.04+ and an older unity version, then, you SHOULD install libconf 2-4 manually otherwise it wont let you create projects, just open console and type: sudo apt-get install libgconf-2-4 And thats it. I found a wonderful piece of software called pkg2appimage which creates AppImages from deb packages. Go to the directory where UnityHub.AppImage is. Then, realized that Unity discontinued the official AppImage at the beginning of this year (2022) in favor of Debian and RPM packages and everyone was angry, so I decided to make my own. Unity officially supports the following Linux distributions: Ubuntu 16.04 Ubuntu 18.04 CentOS 7 Note: If Unity Hub fails to launch while you are using Linux, you might need to give UnityHub.AppImage executable permissions. ![]() ![]() My OS is an Arch-based distro and wanted to use an AppImage for this. So, for a university project I had to use Unity. ![]()
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