F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming One installation for two operating systems

One installation for two operating systems

One installation for two operating systems

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shupshep
Member
143
04-22-2016, 12:40 AM
#1
It’s possible to run the same program on both Linux and Windows without altering the underlying file system significantly. Wine typically handles compatibility layers rather than changing core structures, so you should be able to play the game in either environment. However, performance or minor bugs might differ slightly between OSes. You usually don’t need separate copies for each OS unless specific settings require it.
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shupshep
04-22-2016, 12:40 AM #1

It’s possible to run the same program on both Linux and Windows without altering the underlying file system significantly. Wine typically handles compatibility layers rather than changing core structures, so you should be able to play the game in either environment. However, performance or minor bugs might differ slightly between OSes. You usually don’t need separate copies for each OS unless specific settings require it.

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stefan_reichts
Junior Member
5
04-26-2016, 03:52 PM
#2
You're all set, just reference the same installation directory. The game will update only the save/config files (typically in documents). A few apps may not support this, so reinstalling might be necessary.
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stefan_reichts
04-26-2016, 03:52 PM #2

You're all set, just reference the same installation directory. The game will update only the save/config files (typically in documents). A few apps may not support this, so reinstalling might be necessary.

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SkyCane
Junior Member
29
05-03-2016, 09:28 PM
#3
I've never managed to launch any of my Steam titles on an NTFS drive in Linux, though that's not always a certainty.
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SkyCane
05-03-2016, 09:28 PM #3

I've never managed to launch any of my Steam titles on an NTFS drive in Linux, though that's not always a certainty.

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SLOgamingLP
Member
220
05-05-2016, 04:42 AM
#4
Linux employs a distinct file system, and many games aren’t compatible. Simply pointing to directories won’t function. Instead, you can utilize Wine to run Windows game versions.
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SLOgamingLP
05-05-2016, 04:42 AM #4

Linux employs a distinct file system, and many games aren’t compatible. Simply pointing to directories won’t function. Instead, you can utilize Wine to run Windows game versions.

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Huuulk
Junior Member
24
05-07-2016, 10:25 PM
#5
Reading and writing to NTFS isn’t a big problem. Adding the same Steam library would be fine, and Steam would handle the required Proton updates—though it doesn’t seem to function properly for me. If you moved files to an ext4 partition instead, they’d likely work (provided Proton is installed).
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Huuulk
05-07-2016, 10:25 PM #5

Reading and writing to NTFS isn’t a big problem. Adding the same Steam library would be fine, and Steam would handle the required Proton updates—though it doesn’t seem to function properly for me. If you moved files to an ext4 partition instead, they’d likely work (provided Proton is installed).