Wine 2.9 is now officially available and it's a very interesting one. Fantastic work from the Wine developers.
Highlights:
The new tessellation shaders support makes games like The Witcher 3 much better in Wine. GOL user Shmerl posted some shots and info in our forum, like this one:
Note: You do need other patches for The Witcher 3 to work, Wine-Staging is likely your best bet right now.
Highlights:
- Support for tessellation shaders in Direct3D.
- Binary mode support in WebServices.
- Clipboard changes detected through Xfixes.
- User interface improvements in RegEdit.
- Various bug fixes.
The new tessellation shaders support makes games like The Witcher 3 much better in Wine. GOL user Shmerl posted some shots and info in our forum, like this one:
Note: You do need other patches for The Witcher 3 to work, Wine-Staging is likely your best bet right now.
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Well Shmerl has a decent computer, but 43 FPS in a AAA Game in Wine that is using DX11(?).
There is only one image to describe this:
Have to move my Witcher 3 Installation and try it for myself :D
Last edited by Beaky on 26 May 2017 at 8:45 am UTC
There is only one image to describe this:
Spoiler, click me
Have to move my Witcher 3 Installation and try it for myself :D
Last edited by Beaky on 26 May 2017 at 8:45 am UTC
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He's using an AMD card with the open source driver, while Mesa has come a long way, there's tons of performance improvements left to do. Not only that, but you have to remember this is being run in Wine and Wine is not even remotely finished itself.
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Quoting: LeflWell Shmerl has a decent computer, but 43 FPS in a AAA Game in Wine that is using DX11(?).
That's on max settings (except for hairworks and ambient occlusion). On min settings I get 50-60fps (1920x1200). And that's with RX480. Vega probably will allow playing it at 60fps proper even on max settings (since it looks GPU bound here).
Quoting: liamdaweHe's using an AMD card with the open source driver, while Mesa has come a long way, there's tons of performance improvements left to do. Not only that, but you have to remember this is being run in Wine and Wine is not even remotely finished itself.
Yes indeed, I hope Mesa and Wine will still improve further.
By the way, to run the game you either need Wine staging, or apply at least these two patches to regular Wine:
* https://github.com/wine-compholio/wine-staging/blob/master/patches/ntdll-Grow_Virtual_Heap/0001-ntdll-Remove-memory-limitation-to-32GB-on-64-bit-by-.patch
* https://github.com/wine-compholio/wine-staging/blob/master/patches/wined3d-buffer_create/0001-wined3d-Do-not-pin-large-buffers.patch
Without the first it simply crashes, and without second it runs at around 1 - 5fps.
Last edited by Shmerl on 26 May 2017 at 8:59 am UTC
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Some more wine versions with fixes and I might get it in a sale for 10€. Which is a shame, because I would have paid full price for a native version.
Last edited by coeseta on 26 May 2017 at 9:02 am UTC
Last edited by coeseta on 26 May 2017 at 9:02 am UTC
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I will have a video on this later today - this is excellent news, excellent!!!
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Nice I will test it on WH40k: Eternal Crusade.
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Any progress with GTAV in this Release? Does it even launch or do we have to wait for staging to catch up again?
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Wow! The WINE team has been doing some incredible work. What a fantastic time to be a Linux user. I remember in the early 2000's trying to get the native version of Neverwinter Nights working - what a pain. Now we have Steam with some fantastic games, and WINE making progress almost every day. In another couple months the Witcher 3 should be running great. It's the only game I really miss since making the switch 100% to Linux.
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WINE sure seems to pick up some steam these days. oO
I have no clue how far they are in terms of actually completing DX11 support, but they sure release a lot of patches now. :)
For me, it's Skyrim, Fallout 4 and ESO I am looking forward no longer to have to boot into Windows for. No clue how far WINE is away from being able to run these, though.
I have no clue how far they are in terms of actually completing DX11 support, but they sure release a lot of patches now. :)
For me, it's Skyrim, Fallout 4 and ESO I am looking forward no longer to have to boot into Windows for. No clue how far WINE is away from being able to run these, though.
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Not sure about others, but I've heard Skyrim runs very well already. At least the classic one (was there a remaster)? I'm not keeping track of Bethesda games. The last good TES game was Morrowind, and for that we have OpenMW. :)
Regarding general progress, DX11 is pretty big, so I guess it might take a while before it all will be implemented. But still, some games can work well even before that. TW3 is a good test case, because it's using really a lot of DX11 features and quite heavy ones.
Last edited by Shmerl on 26 May 2017 at 3:21 pm UTC
Regarding general progress, DX11 is pretty big, so I guess it might take a while before it all will be implemented. But still, some games can work well even before that. TW3 is a good test case, because it's using really a lot of DX11 features and quite heavy ones.
Last edited by Shmerl on 26 May 2017 at 3:21 pm UTC
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