F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Playing games in a virtual machine and on the main system using a single GPU

Playing games in a virtual machine and on the main system using a single GPU

Playing games in a virtual machine and on the main system using a single GPU

J
JustcallmeBank
Junior Member
49
09-22-2016, 02:38 PM
#1
Focusing on the main idea, we're exploring a setup where two people play the same game together on different monitors. We're considering virtualization but questioning GPU compatibility between operating systems. If feasible, we'd like suggestions for suitable software.
J
JustcallmeBank
09-22-2016, 02:38 PM #1

Focusing on the main idea, we're exploring a setup where two people play the same game together on different monitors. We're considering virtualization but questioning GPU compatibility between operating systems. If feasible, we'd like suggestions for suitable software.

I
iKegreenS_
Posting Freak
878
09-22-2016, 10:37 PM
#2
Intel's latest integrated graphics cards are designed for consumer devices, yet their performance would be disappointing. For NVIDIA and AMD users, professional-grade cards like Quadros and Radeon Pro would be necessary.
I
iKegreenS_
09-22-2016, 10:37 PM #2

Intel's latest integrated graphics cards are designed for consumer devices, yet their performance would be disappointing. For NVIDIA and AMD users, professional-grade cards like Quadros and Radeon Pro would be necessary.

D
Dhyey
Junior Member
17
09-23-2016, 12:11 AM
#3
This would definitely require significant effort. A hypervisor and two separate Windows installations would be necessary to achieve near-native performance. You wouldn't just be able to run a VM on Windows and have another Windows machine; the system doesn't support hardware passthrough. If you try a Linux host, it introduces its own challenges. Even then, setting it up properly is not simple, and even experienced Linux users would find hardware passthrough complex.
D
Dhyey
09-23-2016, 12:11 AM #3

This would definitely require significant effort. A hypervisor and two separate Windows installations would be necessary to achieve near-native performance. You wouldn't just be able to run a VM on Windows and have another Windows machine; the system doesn't support hardware passthrough. If you try a Linux host, it introduces its own challenges. Even then, setting it up properly is not simple, and even experienced Linux users would find hardware passthrough complex.

O
Oversightx
Member
166
09-23-2016, 01:26 AM
#4
It's frustrating getting games to run smoothly on a VM. I'm using VMware Workstation, which works fine for Eve Online, but it varies depending on the game. You might need to experiment with different VM and OS versions before you discover what works best. It's possible, but it's definitely a hassle. Avoid Oracle VirtualBox for gaming—it doesn't perform well.
O
Oversightx
09-23-2016, 01:26 AM #4

It's frustrating getting games to run smoothly on a VM. I'm using VMware Workstation, which works fine for Eve Online, but it varies depending on the game. You might need to experiment with different VM and OS versions before you discover what works best. It's possible, but it's definitely a hassle. Avoid Oracle VirtualBox for gaming—it doesn't perform well.