• DacoTaco
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    28 months ago

    And what if we have a ton of games outside of steam?
    My next pc will probably have linux, and my current windows as vm. I will get them to work hehe

    • @moody@lemmings.world
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      88 months ago

      Non-steam games can be added to Steam and run from there. There are also other launchers such as Lutris and Heroic that can help you install, manage, and run games from other marketplaces or other non-standard sources.

      • DacoTaco
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        18 months ago

        Figured as much, as proton seems to be focused purely on handheld devices needing launchers etc. But thats ok, means they are (hopefully) upstreaming back to wine

        • Cethin
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          58 months ago

          You’ll still be using proton in Lutris or Bottles most likely, at least for games. Proton is just a compatibility layer. Proton is absolutely not focused on handhelds. It’s just performance improvements for Wine for Windows games.

          You may be thinking of SteamOS.

    • @Crozekiel@lemmy.zip
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      8 months ago

      A combination of Lutris, Bottles, and Proton GE has covered me so far. I find Lutris more gaming focused, and I have used Bottles a lot for little windows programs that aren’t really games (as an example, some stuff I have for making TTRPG maps and tokens and stuff that I could probably find alternatives to, but they work fine in Bottles so ¯\_(ツ)_ ).

    • @wahming
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      18 months ago

      I have managed to use Proton to even run crack installers and such, at worst I’ve had to mess around with settings for a while. No failures so far.