Linux Mint Wine
Linux Mint Wine
I set up Wine via "sudo apt install wine". To use Wine Mono/Gecko with Open With Windows Loader, run the app in Terminal as "wine xxx.exe".
When you launch programs requiring it, it should be set up to install itself. If not, attempt executing "wine winecfg"
Yes, it is feasible to use MSI Afterburner with Wine, though performance may vary.
Linux differs from Windows, so use native programs if you wish. Software using WINE can't properly connect to hardware or other Linux apps—it's not a solid method for general use. On Screen Stats Goverlay offers a GUI for setting up MangoHud. MangoHud Overclocking is an unmaintained tool. GreenWithEnvy provides NVIDIA overclocking support, while LACT targets all GPUs. TuxClocker works with every GPU, and Screen Recording in OBS Studio is supported by Wayfarer SimpleScreenRecorder, though it may not function in Wayland.
Use a method. Set up Wine via command line. Download the key files and add them to your system. Uninstall Wine using package manager commands. Restart the installation process. Access the application through the Windows loader interface. If issues persist, check for missing dependencies like DirectX 9.
It's straightforward. This only makes the upstream version of Wine accessible in your Debian/Ubuntu setup. Whether it helps depends on your goals.