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Just a heads-up: I'm have a Radeon 6870 and wasn't even able to start the game with the free drivers. I had to switch to fglrx to be able to play the game. (Kind of weird as the free ATI driver usually is better.)

edit: It's not a general problem, i.e. it's actually possible to play the game with the free drivers. But it depends on the specific graphics card and how up-to-date your free drivers are. See the very interesting post from *soulsource* to get a nice summary of the situation and a comparison between the proprietary and free ATI drivers. I'll report back after testing the newest free drivers.

edit2: I updated my drivers and now the game works with the free drivers. I had some stability problems with the proprietary drivers. Maybe the free drivers are really more stable. I'll report back in a week or two.

edit3: They indeed seem to be a litte more stable.
Post edited January 01, 2016 by lufu
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lufu: Just a heads-up: I'm have a Radeon 6870 and wasn't even able to start the game with the free driver. I had to switch to fglrx to be able to play the game. (Kind of weird as the free ATI driver usually is better.)
Not really true. The Catalyst drivers are a lot better on linux then the open source drivers which is kind off strange since Nvidia drivers are the other way around. Untill I installed the latest Catalyst linux drivers v.15.2 (manually downloaded and installed from amd site) I had issues with running graphich demanding games on my Linux Mint 17.2, running on r9 270x.
Post edited December 04, 2015 by Matruchus
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lufu: [...] (Kind of weird as the free ATI driver usually is better.)
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Matruchus: Not really true. The Catalyst drivers are a lot better on linux then the open source drivers which is kind off strange since Nvidia drivers are the other way around. [...]
It seems that you are right about the catalyst driver, though the free ones have become a lot better recently (http://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=article&item=radeonsi-cat-wow&num=1). I just always used the free ATI drivers and had never a problem with them (in general). But even when it comes to games (CS:GO, Wasteland 2 etc.) I never had a problem. Until now... so that was quite a surprise for me.

Regarding the Nvidia drivers I don't agree, i.e. the proprietary ones are far better than the free drivers. See for example http://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=article&item=nvidia_nouveau_2014&num=4 and http://www.pcworld.com/article/2911459/why-nvidia-graphics-cards-are-the-worst-for-open-source-but-the-best-for-linux-gaming.html ... but maybe I missed something.
Post edited December 12, 2015 by lufu
Valhalla Hills is running for me, with the Open Source AMD drivers. Yet, I have a Southern Islands card (R9 270X), which uses a different OpenGL driver (RadeonSI) than the Northern Islands based 6870 (Radeon), and I'm running the very latest Mesa and llvm versions (Mesa 11.0.6 and llvm 3.7 to be precise - llvm is only required by RadeonSI, it's optional for Radeon), giving full OpenGL 4.1 support with the open source drivers for Southern Islands.
If you are on Ubuntu (or Mint) you can check out the ~oibaf PPA, which packages the latest Mesa version (you'll need to google for it yourself, as the forums won't let me post links).
If you are, like I, using Gentoo, just do a world update. Mesa 11.0.6 has been marked stable yesterday (but you might still need to unmask llvm 3.7 for tesselation support).

From my experience the open source drivers perform slightly worse than the proprietary ones, but they are by far more stable.
The proprietary AMD drivers have at the moment four big advantages. The first is that they offer full OpenGL 4.5 and OpenCL 2.0 support. There are some programs that simply don't work with the open source drivers. The second advantage are application profiles (driver settings optimized for certain applications, and set based on the program name). Those are the reason certain games perform much better with the proprietary drivers. The third advantage is hardware support. The open source drivers work well up to Southern Islands. Newer chips are working meanwhile, but performance is still a bit low compared to the proprietary drivers. And last, but not least, they have slightly better power saving support, what might be relevant for laptop users (but see below, why I think laptop users should still consider the open source drivers).
The open source drivers have three other big advantages (four if you are using a rolling release distribution). They are much more stable. I had dozens of issues with fglrx, especially when it comes to multi-monitor setups. With fglrx one has to do every single change of the screen configuration in the AMD Catalyst Control Center. If one ever dares just to touch the monitor configuration tools of the desktop environment one is using, weird things start to happen (graphics glitches in some, but not all games, artifacts during video playback,...). And that brings us to the second advantage of the open source drivers, the desktop integration. As they are maintained as part of the Linux software stack (Kernel, Mesa, X.org), they integrate perfectly well with the Linux desktop environments. And this is also the reason for the advantage only relevant on rolling release distributions: The drivers are maintained directly upstream, so that they will work nicely with the latest Kernel and X.org versions, something that often is not true for the proprietary drivers (which, for instance, did not work with Linux kernel versions >=4.0 before last week). The last advantage is, that they support PRIME - on Laptops with switchable graphics one can switch between GPUs on a per application basis, while with the proprietary drivers one has to restart the X11 server to switch GPUs.

Anyhow, most of this will be irrelevant soon™, as AMD announced already some time ago, that in the future™ their proprietary drivers will use the same Kernel and X.org components that the open source drivers use - combining the best of both worlds.
Thanks for your post soulsource. I followed your advice and updated my drivers using the ~oibaf PPA. Now I can play VH with the free drivers. They really seem to be more stable than the proprietary ones, even if the games still crahes every now and then.