I was running gzdoom from the official Debian package, then got bored of downloading it through my browser every time it updated, so I uninstalled, and installed the Flatpak instead.
CleanDoom still tries to run /usr/games/gzdoom, which doesn't exist anymore.
I feel like CleanDoom ought to respond to that situation by trying to find gzdoom again, the same way it does on first startup. In any case, I should be able to tell it to do that somehow.
I was running gzdoom from the official Debian package, then got bored of downloading it through my browser every time it updated, so I uninstalled, and installed the Flatpak instead.
CleanDoom still tries to run /usr/games/gzdoom, which doesn't exist anymore.
I feel like CleanDoom ought to respond to that situation by trying to find gzdoom again, the same way it does on first startup. In any case, I should be able to tell it to do that somehow.