Mallet could have said the same thing that myself and others have pointed out in this forum. Something along the lines of "we're working with Larian on Baldur's Gate 3, worked with 4A on Metro: Exodus for Apple Silicon and continue to work with Unity to bring a great gaming experience to the Mac". That's all public knowledge. Anything would have been better than a muted "sounds good". He didn't even bother trying to sound interested and wanted to move on to the next canned response.On the other hand what was he gonna say? “Yeah we suck for gaming”? He’s not gonna talk down his product, and if they are even lobbying companies for ports they wouldn’t tell anyone (it’s Apple, after all).
I think most technically-minded Mac users have had a Linux phase. Elementary OS is a great example. At first, it appears to be an approximation of the Mac experience. You can have your Mac and eat it too. You may even be able to play most, if not all games on it. Of course, the number of asterisks after these statements could fill a spreadsheet.I started thinking “well if you use x distro and y desktop environment, etc.) sure it’s easy enough to say but that’s hardly general knowledge.
As limited as the Mac is in some ways, I don't have to worry about maintaining the OS and dropping to the command line when I want to do something outside of the default applications. If I want to, then macOS is certified UNIX, the only desktop operating system that is, but I don't need to. Linux may work with more games than the Mac, but Microsoft will always remain the king of compatibility. Windows comes with its own significant compromises, we all know those.
That leaves desktop Linux in this weird middle area. It mainly appeals to people who either enjoy tinkering with the operating system constantly, or have a philosophical belief over what they perceive to be "freedom" in software. I like open source, it has its place, but it's hardly the panacea that hardcore Linux users claim it is.
From my perspective, the Mac gives me most of the benefits of Linux, Apple tends to respect user privacy, and it's usually obvious whether an app or game is going to work on macOS. Each platform has its tradeoffs, and I chose the Mac, despite losing backwards compatibility with old programs and access to Windows-only games.