In 2023, I had 97% Linux with the only Windows games being Skyrim and Fallout 4 because of modding.

Now that I got modding to work on Linux I resolved to have 100% playtime on Linux for 2024. But Steam Replay says nothing because its still only one device :(.

Gaben, throw us a bone here pls.

  • LostXOR@fedia.io
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    4 days ago

    I don’t even have Steam on my Windows install as all my games work fine on Linux. Honestly I should probably just uninstall Windows at this point, I don’t think I’ve used it in months.

      • GregorGizeh@lemmy.zip
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        3 days ago

        As a fairly new Linux user, I haven’t managed to run a single program through bottles. Just never works for me. Luckily I could get by so far with proton and auto generated lutris entries, but especially the latter I wasn’t able to configure manually either.

        • Filetternavn@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          14 hours ago

          Your best bet for finding compatibility with WINE (and by extension Bottles, because that’s what it uses) is through their AppDB:

          https://appdb.winehq.org/objectManager.php?sClass=application&sTitle=Browse+Applications&sOrderBy=appName&bAscending=true

          Here is the page for Photoshop (and all its different versions) and here is the page for Fusion 360 (or rather, a version of it being developed to work with WINE)

          As with many things WINE, the answer is “it depends” (silver is workable, but still has very significant flaws). You can always try it out yourself, and I recommend walking through the HowTos that people post in the listings and the known bugs. The two programs you asked about are particularly difficult, as they are incredibly complex and use many libraries that are specific to only their own application, meaning their implementation in WINE is not priority (WINE tries to be as compatible as possible, targeting the broadest stuff first before gradually narrowing). Most programs “just work” through WINE, but these two in particular have been struggles to get working for years. Development is always happening, so I recommend to try it out if you’re curious if it’ll work for you. And if not, perhaps it will be better in a couple years.

          The token recommendation for apps that don’t work through WINE is to try to find alternatives that play nicer. After all, supporting the anticompetitive business practices of Adobe or Autodesk spits in the face of Linux and the libre software movement as a whole. If you are able to reasonably find alternatives, then that would be ideal, but I find that recommendation quite naïve. As an alternative, you can run Windows in a VM from Linux, or you could dual boot if you only need to use these programs occasionally.

          Bottles is really just a frontend for WINE with some extra features baked into the GUI to make the experience better for the end user. Compatibility in Bottles will still be determined by the compatibility a program has through WINE.

    • Lucy :3@feddit.org
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      3 days ago

      And even if you’d use it, everything I know off - except games - run fine in a VM.

    • umbrella@lemmy.ml
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      4 days ago

      thats how i noticed i could move it into a VM for the odd thing or two i would use it for every once in a blood moon