Comment on Lutris now being built with Claude AI, developer decides to hide it after backlash
forrgott@lemmy.zip 1 day agoThere’s actually a number of options. Lutris and Bottles are both built on top of Wine. And there are other apps that use Wine to make it all work, but I’m not very familiar with anything else…yet!
Bottles can be a little tricky to get used to - one of the biggest issues is that it sandboxes the Wine runtime, so you’ll often need to move your .exe into the right file path. But, other than that I found it pretty easy to use! So if you need something that you can “drop in” to replace Lutris, it’s worth a try! It has some helpful preconfigured runtime environments, depending on if you are running a general propose application or a video game. For the power users, you can even start with a blank slate.
brsrklf@jlai.lu 1 day ago
Interesting. I am mostly interested in running games. I’ll have a look into how Bottles work then.
I feel like for most if not all of my use cases that are not specific games, I can find some decent stuff running natively.
forrgott@lemmy.zip 1 day ago
Oh, definitely. One of the best things about Linux and the free software movement, innit? But, the ‘applications’ order in bottles is great for that one tool that is just hard to live without, or some specific tool created by the community that may or may not ever get a native port (SAK.exe for managing Switch ROM files comes to mind for me).
brsrklf@jlai.lu 1 day ago
For now I think the thing that I’ll miss the most will be Virtual Desktop. I haven’t tried my headset with this PC yet, I have a more recent one that’s still on Win11 for that, but I know SteamVR is completely broken for me and VD is what makes PCVR even possible for me.
forrgott@lemmy.zip 1 day ago
I am trying to give their programmers credit where I can; first, the massive influx of time and money into gaming on Linux has had obvious, amazing benefits. And my recent gripes would be about a persistent bug that has crept into Steam OS desktop mode; but it’s a one line shell script to fix, and they just moved to a much more recent kernel, not to mention officially tackling support for third party handheld PCs, so…yeah, that all sounds like a headache on crack.
But, honestly, I hear ya all the same. I think we feel confident holding these guys to a high standard for good reasons, so hopefully it all comes out in the wash.