F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Linux support for Windows emulation is growing and may continue advancing.

Linux support for Windows emulation is growing and may continue advancing.

Linux support for Windows emulation is growing and may continue advancing.

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M4t3u5_GamerBR
Junior Member
12
12-26-2025, 01:06 AM
#1
I strongly dislike relying on Windows for many applications. I’m hoping for improvements in Wine or a Linux distribution that can simulate Windows to run programs smoothly. Are there any current developments or updates being made toward this goal? No, I’m not interested in full emulation games with minimal performance loss.
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M4t3u5_GamerBR
12-26-2025, 01:06 AM #1

I strongly dislike relying on Windows for many applications. I’m hoping for improvements in Wine or a Linux distribution that can simulate Windows to run programs smoothly. Are there any current developments or updates being made toward this goal? No, I’m not interested in full emulation games with minimal performance loss.

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dynexman33
Member
59
01-01-2026, 08:39 PM
#2
Can't you execute Windows inside a virtual machine? It might lack GPU pass-through (especially in free VM tools, I think) for demanding games, though it should handle most Windows applications. For gaming, WINE and Proton perform reasonably well. Pop-OS, Drauger OS, GamerOS should work fairly well. If you wish to upgrade Wine, PlayOnLinux is a solid option as well, along with Lutris.
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dynexman33
01-01-2026, 08:39 PM #2

Can't you execute Windows inside a virtual machine? It might lack GPU pass-through (especially in free VM tools, I think) for demanding games, though it should handle most Windows applications. For gaming, WINE and Proton perform reasonably well. Pop-OS, Drauger OS, GamerOS should work fairly well. If you wish to upgrade Wine, PlayOnLinux is a solid option as well, along with Lutris.

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KutzClan
Member
184
01-11-2026, 10:51 PM
#3
Wine has been around for a while and certain distributions such as TwisterOS come with it by default. However, it doesn't run smoothly on Windows without affecting performance.
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KutzClan
01-11-2026, 10:51 PM #3

Wine has been around for a while and certain distributions such as TwisterOS come with it by default. However, it doesn't run smoothly on Windows without affecting performance.

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Jackey599
Member
57
01-12-2026, 08:41 PM
#4
Yes, you can run Linux and install Steam there. You can also play games directly from a Windows virtual machine.
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Jackey599
01-12-2026, 08:41 PM #4

Yes, you can run Linux and install Steam there. You can also play games directly from a Windows virtual machine.

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buckeye2012
Member
181
01-17-2026, 05:17 AM
#5
If the performance drop reaches around thirty percent or higher, you can usually upgrade your equipment to recover. However, when the loss is fifty percent or more, it might not be worth the effort.
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buckeye2012
01-17-2026, 05:17 AM #5

If the performance drop reaches around thirty percent or higher, you can usually upgrade your equipment to recover. However, when the loss is fifty percent or more, it might not be worth the effort.

I
iiMau
Member
89
01-17-2026, 07:10 AM
#6
It seems many applications won't start because certain components aren't properly supported or fail unexpectedly.
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iiMau
01-17-2026, 07:10 AM #6

It seems many applications won't start because certain components aren't properly supported or fail unexpectedly.

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tetriad
Member
203
01-17-2026, 08:13 AM
#7
No such thing would work because there would be no hardware support for games, making them impossible to run. You'd have to send the game through the GPU for it to function in a virtual environment, which requires significant setup and needs an extra GPU just for that purpose.
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tetriad
01-17-2026, 08:13 AM #7

No such thing would work because there would be no hardware support for games, making them impossible to run. You'd have to send the game through the GPU for it to function in a virtual environment, which requires significant setup and needs an extra GPU just for that purpose.

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OhSmailPvPNub
Member
67
01-21-2026, 09:26 PM
#8
You wanted Linux as your primary operating system, using it for accessing online services, while running Windows inside a virtual machine offline. You also planned to connect to Steam from Linux and download content there.
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OhSmailPvPNub
01-21-2026, 09:26 PM #8

You wanted Linux as your primary operating system, using it for accessing online services, while running Windows inside a virtual machine offline. You also planned to connect to Steam from Linux and download content there.

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Mavoh
Junior Member
10
01-23-2026, 09:46 AM
#9
Sure, I understood what you needed.
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Mavoh
01-23-2026, 09:46 AM #9

Sure, I understood what you needed.

Y
yudencio
Member
65
01-31-2026, 08:50 AM
#10
It turned out to be worthwhile, as many new features work seamlessly on Linux. That’s a plus, considering Vulcan is helpful.
Y
yudencio
01-31-2026, 08:50 AM #10

It turned out to be worthwhile, as many new features work seamlessly on Linux. That’s a plus, considering Vulcan is helpful.

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