Proton GE, the community-built fork of the Proton compatibility layer for Linux has a big new release out.
Need a quick reminder? Wine is a compatibility layer that can help to run Windows apps and games on Linux. Valve have their own version called Proton which is included with the Linux Steam Client in Steam Play, and Proton GE is a special version of it built by user "GloriousEggroll". Why use it? You might find certain games need adjustments not currently in the official Proton and Proton GE can make them run "out of the box".
Proton-5.9-GE-3-ST is the brand new release aimed to now be the stable Proton GE release. It pulls in tons of fixes to help various Windows games run on Linux including GTA V, Metal Gear Solid V: Ground Zeroes, Planet Zoo, Jurassic World: Evolution, Origin client fixes and much more.
You can find the release on GitHub. If you wish to install it into Steam, the process is quite simple as Steam auto-detects new tools added for Steam Play as long as you put them in the right folder. For normal Steam use you can download the release build of Proton GE (Proton-5.9-GE-3-ST.tar.gz) and extract it into here:
~/.steam/root/compatibilitytools.d/
Create the folder if it doesn't exist.
Then reboot Steam for it to show up as an option to force on a game. More info on the Proton GE GitHub.
Quoting: Liam DaweHow dedicated is it? Is it a truly fanatical page, or just quite conscientious?Quoting: NanobangLiam, I'd like to suggest adding this, whole-cloth, to your already existing Proton/SteamPlay primer. This article was exactly the kind of concise-but-clear info someone like me wonders about. Really excellent work!We have a dedicated page, which links to a proper guide ;)
Quoting: aokamiWhat does NR, MF and ST mean in the build id?NR - fixes for video in games by NetherRealm (Injustice 2, Mortal Kombat 11);
MF - fixes for Media Foundation video without the need for installing Windows dlls;
ST - stable (for now it's 5.9 while the others are 5.11), because newer branches break some games.
Check what version is better for your game first, the latest doesn't mean the best.
ironically the game itself dont work, there is nothing on screen.
now i have an proton build who can play the game except the cutscenes and another one who can play the cut scenes except the game...
i guess its time to fill another ticket on github
Quoting: Liam DaweQuoting: NanobangLiam, I'd like to suggest adding this, whole-cloth, to your already existing Proton/SteamPlay primer. This article was exactly the kind of concise-but-clear info someone like me wonders about. Really excellent work!We have a dedicated page, which links to a proper guide ;)
Do please consider adding this to your excellent beginner's guide? (I called it your primer, but this is what I was thinking of :))
Last edited by Nanobang on 7 July 2020 at 12:33 pm UTC
Quoting: PatolaQuoting: Comandante ÑoñardoI wonder why there are more improvements in PROTON GE than in the official PROTON, which wasn't updated in about a month...That's quite simple. Because some of these improvements make some games work, and a few games work better, but break other games. Official Proton can't have this. It has to have the least number of failed games possible and can't tolerate regressions. It has to adopt a conservative approach to be useful.
I know, but... a month without improvements or a new release candidate for public testings?
See more from me