this post was submitted on 17 Oct 2025
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I don't understand why anyone would use this. Its not just running Windows apps in a Windows environment like WINE, it's a full installation of Windows in a VM, including all of the awful parts of running Windows. It's infinitely simpler to just use Windows in another partition.
I am dual booting as I get VR to a better level, but I want that cancer off my system completely one day. Right now I have no monitors for vr performance in linux (any suggestions? FPSVR is my monitor for windows in VR) but it "feels" like often I am getting less than 20 fps (eye fatigue and strain that does not occur in the same games on windows) tho it looks like it is at least 35-60fps in the recorded playback, it just feels off.
I am hoping for some feed back on this from people that have used it. I could use bottles but doesn't that also require a windows "install" or container type thing like this? I am just exploring different avenues to get things working and this looks promising, tho a VM may make a bit of a dent in my old ryzen 7-3800 and I am fairly confidant if I had an amd card instead of the RTX 4070ti super my experience would be better but that is a cost I cannot swallow yet and I need a new cpu more. In the end I will prolly try to get wine and bottles working but a simple to get running app like this could be the short term answer
This does not get the cancer off your system, it just installs it inside of Linux. That's the point I'm trying to make.
Getting the cancer out involves what Steam does, running the API calls through a translation layer like WINE or Proton. Bottles is just a frontend for that.
I'm not sure what the state of VR is in Linux, other than "not good".
Probably better than you think, not by a mile, but still way better than the awful SteamVR for Linux could make people believe https://db.vronlinux.org/ https://lvra.gitlab.io/
I'm hoping to find linux versions one day. If I didn't love vr so much I wouldn't need windows at all as all the flat games I have tried work beautifully from both steam and lutris, ie; satisfactory, ESO, and Dawn of Man.