1. It doesn't mention exactly which games are there, the info there is very sparse and confusing and seems to be focused around some weekday time based hackathon<p>2. How exactly are those "engineering simulation games"?
It seems the initial benefit of this package to engineers is figuring out how to make it work. You have the carrot of free games in there, go get em!<p>After reading some of the other documents there, this would probably be a better description of what this package is about:<p><a href="https://github.com/sim-museum/esports-for-engineers/blob/master/files/esports-for-engineers-brochure-2204LTS.pdf">https://github.com/sim-museum/esports-for-engineers/blob/mas...</a><p>I also found these ones helpful in understanding what is going on here: basicWalkthrough.pdf, runThisScriptFirst.sh, and metaLearning.txt<p>I didn't try it yet, I would need some disk space first. But fascinating ideas to play with!
For more information about the games in the package:
<a href="https://alternativeto.net/software/esports-for-engineers/about/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://alternativeto.net/software/esports-for-engineers/abo...</a><p>Grand Prix Legends demo (free but not open source) is one of the sim racing games in the package. It just turned 25 years old last month, but is still played online by hundreds of fans: <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I5OqIOIhlyA">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I5OqIOIhlyA</a>
This is a (messy imo) collection of scripts to install various games on Linux (utilizing Wine). There's no mention of any source code for the games being released.