GardenData61371
Member
I have a few games that for the love of God won't run on Linux. Neither with Wine or Proton. But I don't want to dual boot. What do I do now?
Don't you need a 2nd gpu for that?A WM with Windows in it
If you are using a desktop computer and have 2 separate hard drives you can dual boot without problems.I have a few games that for the love of God won't run on Linux. Neither with Wine or Proton. But I don't want to dual boot. What do I do now?
You still didn't say which Linux I should install ! ¯\_(ツ)_/¯What are the names of the games, GardenData? We can take a look.
Seriously, you have nineteen (19) Threads in a little over 6 months, which share one common theme, that you cannot make up your mind.
I understand that, but if these Threads continue, I may have to take them all and combine them under one Thread called perhaps "Linux Beginner - hopelessly confused".
Cheers
Wizard
Which are these games, if you don't mind my asking?I have a few games that for the love of God won't run on Linux. Neither with Wine or Proton. But I don't want to dual boot. What do I do now?
I believe Is a QEMU/KVM virtual machine / emulator which allows the user to install and run OSs and other software from within it.Most of the games that I've tried on VMWare don't run. Some do, but many don't. Does QEMU/KVM do something different that resolves this?
Is there a particular game that runs on hardware but not in VMWare that I can download and try in QEMU/KVM to see?Does QEMU/KVM do something different that resolves this?
Most of the games that I've tried on VMWare don't run. Some do, but many don't. Does QEMU/KVM do something different that resolves this?
Fallout 4 seems to be a commercial product. In fact, it seems to have been replaced by Fallout 76. I was hoping there might be something I can download for free that you can't run in VMWare which I could try to run.Fallout 4 won't run in a VM.