YouTube videos require cookies, you must accept their cookies to view. View cookie preferences.
Direct Link
Direct Link
Super Wolfensstein HD: http://goo.gl/vvNjYp
WINE: https://www.winehq.org
PlayOnLinux: https://www.playonlinux.com
Some you may have missed, popular articles from the last month:
All posts need to follow our rules. For users logged in: please hit the Report Flag icon on any post that breaks the rules or contains illegal / harmful content. Guest readers can email us for any issues.
And I do not use multiboot anymore on my new PC as it is too hard to maintain, and I'm too lazy to reboot my PC.
I must admit, I'm a hair's breadth away from doing that myself. It's only one or two game franchises that are keeping it there.
I'll have to remember to give that a spin. Thanks for the info.
To be honest, years ago I used to think Wine was a joke...such an ambitious task that would never go anywhere. These days I'm really impressed how far they've come. Wine may well in the future be the ONLY way to run old Windows apps on new hardware...it will become this amazing archiving tool.
I also used to think that Wine (no pun intended) watered down the purity of Linux by running evil MS stuff. However, I've changed my opinion on that too...Wine is like this boa constrictor, squeezing the life out of native DX9 apps and rendering Windows useless. I mean WHY would you run Windows, when you can run Linux...AND run Windows apps as well?? The Borg wants you to assimilate....
As mentioned in the video, things have definitely improved over time. There was a time when getting many games to run required compiling Wine with particular patches, but I haven't found any need for that since the fixes needed to make StarCraft 2 run out of the box were merged into the main line.
One recent problem my partner had was not having 32 bit audio libraries installed, which made Morrowind crash at the main menu. Other than that and Zombie Driver HD needing a DLL override, I don't think she's had to do anything to get the games that she plays in Wine working.
I've never used PlayOnLinux, but it seems to solve a problem I don't have. Winetricks sorts out a bunch of library/configuration things that some people might have trouble with, and creating separate .wine profiles is as easy as putting
WINEPREFIX=~/.wine_foo/
before calling Wine in a terminal. I prefer to install all my apps via a command line so that if there are any problems, I have some idea of what's going on, and Wine automatically creates .desktop launchers for applications which include the appropriate prefix, so running after installing is just a matter of double clicking an icon.The Wine project's AppDB is a nice resource for looking whether others have had success running an app, and has a nicer way of presenting test results/information than the PlayOnLinux site IMO.
Before Steam for Linux landed, I think all but two or three games from my Steam library (it was around 200 by the time Steam for Linux launched) ran happily under Wine, and DRM didn't play a role in the problems I had with those. I'd definitely advocate people buying stuff from GOG, but those considering Steam shouldn't need to be wary of DRM related problems unless the game uses some third party DRM (in which case, it's worth considering not buying/playing it anyway :D ).
Back in the early days of SteamLUG, we were a community of Linux users who ran Steam in Wine. There were definitely people who had problems, but on the most part, I think positive experiences were the norm. These days we don't see much Wine discussion - I guess that either fewer people are using it or nobody's having any problems.
I definitely don't use it as much as I used to, but Wine is a tremendously impressive piece of software that represents a mind boggling amount of work, and I'm glad it's there (alongside DOSBox, ScummVM and UAE) for legacy stuff :)
I've used play on Linux once or twice in the past but I'd rather just manually figure stuff out with wine. (I like messing around until something works the way I want it to ;) )
specialy the parts where its configuring something or making shortcuts etc (its like windows with lots of next, next buttons imo)
i'm mostly using my own scripts for standalone wine versions and prefixes
i sometimes use playonlinux compiled wine packages though which i download from here:
http://www.playonlinux.com/wine/binaries/ and then just extract to the place where i want.
my basic scripts are like that: http://pastebin.com/Xhr7K2ty
then also same scripts for winecfg, winetricks and regedit.
i just copy those scripts to new game folder and then modify the game executable :)
that's how i like to keep my stuff organized
Decided to stop excluding myself from franchises I love just because I'm on Linux, and thankfully Starcraft 2 works well in wine :D
For someone new tho Wine, PoL is a great and easy start, but you must know that it might not be the best setup for your game. Often it's a good basis to work with.
Nonetheless, I'd not ever seen or tried q4wine, and it looks very good indeed, and major thanks for pointing it out. Of course, when my some of my favorite GOG games are getting Linux versions (even the ones that come as a .tar.gz file that uses wine), I'm using them and removing the POL versions.
Life is good, and the future's so bright, I gotta wear shades.:D
Now I barely use it, used it for the first time in maybe 5 months this month to play FF7. Though it's less essential for gaming than it used to be, it will still always be great for those games we know will never get ported.