Please remove or tell me to delete if this isn’t allowed!

I’ve been dual booting Ubuntu and Windows for a good few years now. I keep the windows around for gaming, because, ahem, I don’t like giving EA, among others, money. I know it’s not a problem to play most of the games I’ve paid for on Linux, but does anyone have experience with playing games on Linux that you’ve, somehow, obtained for free? And keeping them updated, too?

I’m still going to dual boot because keeping my games separate from my work is a decent adhd strategy for me, so I’m open to gaming friendly OS suggestions as well!

2 points

I actually don’t have experience with this, but I’ve heard that all you have to do is use WINE and use the installers as usual and things should work out.

I’m considering doing the same actually so I’d be interested in hearing how this goes. I don’t dual boot, but use Linux on my work computer and have just been using WSL on my home computer. Would be nice to get rid of the “gaming mode” Windows for my ADHD as well.

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2 points

Hmm I somehow thought that wouldn’t work with illicit copies; I’ll read up on wine and torrent software that works on it and get back to you if you want :)

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2 points

You know I was reading this too, but you actually need some sort of launcher like Lutris or Heroic launcher which comes with Wine and does some setting up. Possible to run just purely through Wine (I did this at start) but the results are… not that great. Though might depend on the game.

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10 points
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You’re going to want to install the Proton tools which include Wine and pile of other tools for making games work well (sometimes better) on Linux.

Besides installing Steam for Linux, you can also use Lutris which allows you a lot of tweaking to get non-steam games working under Proton.

You can check the viability of running your games on Linux with ProtonDB.

A shortcut to all this is to use a distro like Nobara or Bazzite that are pretty much designed from the ground up to run games and other graphics intensive software like video editors etc.

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4 points

Good pointers, thanks! Testing it before actually deleting windows is important to me

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2 points

Yah, those distros have all this stuff preinstalled and I don’t have nVidia, but if you do there’s a place in the Nobara welcome screen to enable the nVidia drivers. GloriousEggroll, who does the Nobara distro, is one of the primary contributors to Proton.

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2 points

A word of caution on using Bazzite, it is an immutable operating system based off of fedora atomic. So there are differences/limitations in how software is installed. Not suggesting you avoid Bazzite, I’m using it on my main gaming rig, just know that it’s a bit different than a standard Fedora varient.

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3 points

I’ve done plenty of installs for older games. I found using Lutris was easier than trying to do it manually, but it’s not perfect (but it handles things like Proton, as another comment mentioned). It’ll let you install games from their windows installers, so whatever games you’ve aquired should install as usual.

I think you can use Steam (for Linux) to manage Proton and your non-steam installs, but I haven’t tried it.

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2 points

LinuxRuleZ makes repacks specifically for this. Has worked well with both Linux mint on desktop and bazzite on steam deck

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2 points

You can add a non-steam game to steam and run it using proton, did it for one game that I couldn’t make work on Lutris or Heroic.

Though for some reason you have to enable the compatibility for it even if you have set it up to use Proton automatically for all games

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1 point
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Yep, all “3rd party” games can integrate seamlessly with steam very easily. It even works great for steam decks console mode. emulated games too

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3 points
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Installing GOG games (without Galaxy) is about the same as what you’re describing. The easiest way is with a game manager like Lutris, because it offers patched versions of Wine (like GloriousEggroll’s builds), DXVK, vkd3d-proton, and various Windows libraries that the game or its launcher might need. Manually discovering and installing all that stuff is harder, but it can be done.

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