Playnite is the de-facto open-source game library manager on Windows. Free, no telemetry, plugin-friendly, and built to pull Steam, Epic, GOG, Battle.net, Ubisoft Connect, Amazon Games, and EA Play into one window. The XDA story this week on cloud gaming nudged the conversation in a different direction: not every PC gamer wants one launcher to rule them all. For some of us, Lutris is better. For others, GOG Galaxy is. The seven Playnite alternatives below cover the corners Playnite leaves open.

Quick comparison

AppBest forPlatformsFree planStandout feature
GOG GalaxyMulti-store library with cloud savesWindows, macOSYesDRM-free game integrations
LutrisLinux gaming with Wine and ProtonLinuxYes (open source)Recipe-based installs for Windows games
Heroic Games LauncherCross-platform Epic and GOGWindows, macOS, LinuxYes (open source)Simple Epic store integration on Linux and macOS
LaunchBoxEmulator-heavy collections with rich metadataWindowsYes (limited)Big Box mode for living-room TVs
Razer CortexModern Windows game launcher with optimisationWindowsYesGame Booster mode and deal aggregator
JunctionTag-driven library with extensible metadataWindowsYes (open source)Lightweight, no .NET dependencies
Steam ROM ManagerAdding non-Steam shortcuts to SteamWindows, macOS, LinuxYes (open source)Mass-import shortcuts with cover art

Why people leave Playnite

A few patterns repeat in the r/playnite and GitHub issues:

Each pick below answers at least one of those.

The alternatives

1. GOG Galaxy — best multi-store library with cloud saves

GOG Galaxy is CD Projekt’s launcher and the best polished multi-store option. Connect Steam, Epic, EA Play, Ubisoft Connect, Xbox, PSN, Origin, and most of the rest, and Galaxy pulls in achievements, playtime, and library. Cloud saves cross Steam and GOG cleanly. The DRM-free side keeps the GOG brand intact.

Where it falls short: macOS support is partial. Galaxy is free, but the underlying platform integrations rely on each store’s API and break occasionally.

Pricing:

Migrating from Playnite: start by exporting our Playnite library as CSV, then re-link in Galaxy through the store connections.

Download: gog.com/galaxy

Bottom line: the right pick for users who want a polished multi-store library and are not chasing customisation depth.

2. Lutris — best for Linux gaming with Wine and Proton

Lutris is the Linux pick. Install Windows games via Wine or Proton recipes maintained by the community, manage native Linux games alongside, and integrate Steam, GOG, Itch.io, Epic (through Heroic), and HumbleBundle. The recipe system is what makes Lutris distinctive: each Windows game has a community-tuned install profile.

Where it falls short: Linux-only. The recipe system fails occasionally and needs manual edits.

Pricing:

Migrating from Playnite: there is no direct migration. Lutris’s value is on a different OS.

Download: lutris.net

Bottom line: the right pick the moment a Linux PC enters the household.

3. Heroic Games Launcher — best cross-platform Epic and GOG client

Heroic Games Launcher is the open-source way to install and run Epic Store and GOG games on Linux and macOS without the official Epic launcher. Heroic also runs on Windows and is a cleaner Epic experience than the official client.

Where it falls short: does not handle Steam, which is the biggest library most PC gamers have. Pair Heroic with Steam (and Playnite or another aggregator) for a complete setup.

Pricing:

Migrating from Playnite: point Heroic at the existing Epic and GOG installs. Use the rest of the Playnite library through Steam shortcuts or another launcher.

Download: heroicgameslauncher.com

Bottom line: the right pick on Linux or macOS when Epic and GOG are the libraries that matter most.

4. LaunchBox — best for emulator-heavy collections

LaunchBox started as a DOSBox frontend and grew into the most polished emulator-and-PC library manager on Windows. Big Box mode is the standout: a controller-friendly UI built for living-room TVs, with cover-flow browsing, video playback, and full-screen metadata. The metadata scraping is among the best in the category.

Where it falls short: the modern PC store integrations are weaker than Playnite or Galaxy. The free version locks the most useful features behind LaunchBox Premium.

Pricing:

Migrating from Playnite: export the Playnite library and re-import. Plan a few hours for the cover-art reconciliation.

Download: launchbox-app.com

Bottom line: the right pick for a couch-gaming setup with a heavy emulator collection.

5. Razer Cortex — best modern Windows game launcher with optimisation

Razer Cortex is the Razer-branded game launcher that adds a Game Booster mode (close background processes during play) and a deal aggregator (cross-store price tracking). The library aggregation is competent. The optimisation features are the actual hook.

Where it falls short: Razer telemetry by default. Game Booster’s effect on modern Windows is modest. Some users dislike the marketing pressure.

Pricing:

Migrating from Playnite: link the same store connections in Cortex. Expect to disable a couple of promotional toggles after install.

Download: razer.com/cortex

Bottom line: the right pick when the deal-tracking and optimisation features are the actual draw.

6. Junction — best lightweight tag-driven library

Junction is the lightweight open-source alternative for the PC user who finds Playnite too heavy. Tag-based library organisation, custom metadata fields, and a smaller footprint than Playnite’s .NET dependency.

Where it falls short: smaller community. The store integrations cover fewer launchers than Playnite or Galaxy.

Pricing:

Migrating from Playnite: export library data, re-import in Junction.

Download: junction.app

Bottom line: the right pick for the user who wants tag-driven organisation without Playnite’s surface area.

7. Steam ROM Manager — best for adding non-Steam shortcuts to Steam

Steam ROM Manager is the niche pick. Instead of replacing Playnite, it adds every non-Steam shortcut to Steam itself, with cover art and metadata. The result is one library in Steam Big Picture, perfect for Steam Deck and HTPC setups.

Where it falls short: not a library manager in the traditional sense. We still need Playnite (or its equivalent) to track everything outside Steam.

Pricing:

Migrating from Playnite: keep Playnite for tracking, use Steam ROM Manager to surface those shortcuts in Steam.

Download: github.com/SteamGridDB/steam-rom-manager

Bottom line: the right pick for a Steam Deck or a Big Picture HTPC setup that wants everything in one library, in Steam.

How to choose

Pick GOG Galaxy for the most polished multi-store library on Windows. Pick Lutris on Linux. Pick Heroic for Epic and GOG on Linux or macOS. Pick LaunchBox for couch-gaming with emulators. Pick Razer Cortex for deal tracking and Game Booster. Pick Junction for a lightweight Playnite alternative. Pick Steam ROM Manager to fold everything into Steam Big Picture. Stay on Playnite if our setup is already comfortable and the plugins we depend on are healthy.

FAQ

Is GOG Galaxy better than Playnite?

Polish and ease, yes. Depth, no. Playnite’s plugin ecosystem and theming surface are deeper than Galaxy’s.

Can I run Playnite on Linux?

Not natively. The .NET dependency is Windows-first. On Linux, use Lutris or Heroic Games Launcher.

Is there a free alternative to Playnite?

All seven alternatives above are free. Open-source picks: Lutris, Heroic, Junction, Steam ROM Manager. The free-but-proprietary picks: GOG Galaxy, Razer Cortex, LaunchBox (with a Premium upgrade for the best features).

What is the best game library manager for Steam Deck?

Steam ROM Manager, used to add non-Steam shortcuts back into Steam, then browsed through Steam Big Picture. Heroic also runs on Steam Deck.

Does Playnite still get updates?

Yes. Playnite has a regular release cadence on GitHub, with an active plugin community.