Wine Reviews has release information and reviews of Windows applications and games running on Linux macOS and ChromeOS using Wine from Winehq.org Proton Lutris Q4Wine PlayOnLinux PlayOnMac WineBottler WineSkin WineTricks and Wine-Staging.
Winetricks is an easy way to work around problems in Wine.
It has a menu of supported games/apps for which it can do
all the workarounds automatically. It also allows the installation of
missing DLLs and tweaking of various Wine settings.
The Wine development release 8.1 is now available.
What's new in this release:
Windows version set to Windows 10 for new prefixes.
Many code cleanups that were deferred during code freeze.
Various bug fixes.
The source is available now.
Binary packages are in the process of being built, and will appear soon at their respective download locations.
Bugs fixed in 8.1 (total 27):
- #43235 Dungeons & Dragons Online crashes on FreeBSD - #44650 Multiple Blizzard games need dxgi and d3d11 dlls mapped without hole between two LOAD segments (Diablo III v2. 6. 1. 49286+, World of Warcraft, Overwatch) - #47508 FL Studio: Pressing backspace while editing the name of something closes edit name window prematurely - #49202 Never exited critical section in freetype.c - #49443 Anno 1800: Super slow & bad performance - #49615 Device read errors logged in dmesg when running wine commands with empty CD/DVD drive, since 5.5 - #51040 msi:package fails on Windows 10 if privileges not high enough - #51313 gdi32:driver sometimes fails with a STATUS_GRAPHICS_PRESENT_OCCLUDED error - #51784 The dinput8:hid output is too big in Wine - #52354 winemac.drv not functional on non metal GPUs - #52462 Wine don't recognize Ipega PG-9025 LT, RT and right analog stick is miss-mapped to RT and LT - #52878 Free PC Audit 5.1.211.96 fails to show info in 'Brief' tab (needs GetBinaryValue method of the StdRegProv class) - #52936 winhttp:url assumes 0xfb00 cannot be converted to the ANSI codepage, fails with UTF-8 codepage - #53142 ieframe:webbrowser - test_ClientSite() has a rare failure on Windows 10 1809+ - #53274 adsldp:ldap - test_ParseDisplayName() sometimes fails to connect to the server - #53386 cmd.exe: FOR /F USEBACKQ doesn't handle UTF-16 output of commands. - #53594 GOG Galaxy crashes in GetExtendedTcpTable() - #53666 Logitech X-56 Stick crashes the joystick subsystem if connected - #54030 Snagit needs Win32_Volume class ( 'select deviceid from win32_volume where driveletter =C:') - #54215 ListView doesn't refresh when changing between List and Details styles. - #54289 RtlCopyContext buffer overflow - #54328 nsi:nsi - test_tcp_tables() sometimes crashes in Wine - #54337 AviUtl shows Japanese text as garbage after conversion in ExEdit edit box - #54353 crypt32:cert - testVerifyRevocation() gets unexpected success in Wine on second run - #54357 Spurious fixme message when calling ScrollWindow() - #54364 RtlGenRandom fails on systems with more than 128 cores - #54376 ws2_32:sock - test_reuseaddr() overflows a sockaddr variable by reading an AF_INET6 peer name into it
Run Microsoft Windows Applications and Games on Mac, Linux or ChromeOS save up to 20% off CodeWeavers CrossOver+ today.
Valve has just published Proton 7.0-6 as the newest version of this
Wine-based software that powers Steam Play for running Windows games on
Linux. Proton 7.0-6 had been available in testing and release candidate
form since the end of last year while now has been promoted to stable.
With Proton 7.0-6 comes more Windows games that are playable under
Linux. The newly-supported titles include Gotham Knights, UNCHARTED:
Legacy of Thieves Collection, Heroes of the Dark, Super Arcade Racing,
Crazy Machines 3, King under the Mountain, NinNinDays2, and Mahjong
Ladies.
Proton 7.0-6 also fixes an Ubisoft Connect launcher failure, fixing a
texture issue on the menu areas on Quake III Arena, several Microsoft
Flight Simulator fixes, and a range of other game fixes. Proton 7.0-6
also ships with Wine Mono 7.4 and DXVK-NVAPI 0.6.
Now playable:
Gotham Knights
UNCHARTED: Legacy of Thieves Collection
Heroes of the Dark
Super Arcade Racing
Crazy Machines 3
King under the Mountain
NinNinDays2
雀姬 (Mahjong ladies)
Fix Ubisoft Connect launcher failure caused by launcher update.
Fix Septerra Core hanging on redistributables installation.
Fix Persona 5 Royal crashing when creating game save data.
Fix Vampire Survivors intermittent error message.
Fix Super House of Dead Ninjas, Enemy Mind, and Out There Somewhere frame hitching every few seconds.
Fix Zeepkist freezing when using controller.
Fix Overcooked! All You Can Eat being unable to add a second controller-using player.
Fix Quake III: Arena and Quake III: Team Arena displaying weird texture over the menu.
Fix the new EA launcher displaying a blank window.
Fix Marvel Snap not being able connect to online services.
Fix Microsoft Flight Simulator crashing during longer flights.
Fix Microsoft Flight Simulator not displaying live traffic.
Fix Microsoft Flight Simulator not starting after a recent game update.
Fix Microsoft Flight Simulator crashing when starting next to big cities.
Fix Sackboy: A Big Adventure failing to start the first time it's launched.
Fix Spyro Reignited Trilogy playing intro video in a wrong language.
Fix Jurassic World Evolution 2 bad performance with recent Proton versions.
Fix multiple monitor support in Project Cars 2 and Project Cars 3.
Fix Korean not being rendered correctly in Romance of the Three Kingdoms XIII launcher.
Fix multiple languages not rendering correctly in Sins of a Solar Empire: Rebellion.
Fix Lost Lands: Dark Overlord, Lost Lands: Dark Lord, Lost Lands:
Redemption, and Haunted Hotel: Silent Waters Collector's Edition
crashing when trying to set a wallpaper.
Fix video playback regression with Chronos: Before the Ashes.
Improve video playback with OUTRIDERS and ToGather: Island.
There will always be apps — mostly games — whose publishers won’t
port them to the Mac for financial or contractual reasons. Codeweavers’
CrossOver offers a simple, convenient way to run many of those apps. The
result isn’t as reliable or universal as other solutions, but it’s a
lot cheaper and easier, and with CrossOver’s helpful database of app
functionality and generous try-before-you-buy period, you can see
whether it’ll run the apps you want to use before you commit your
hard-earned cash.
CrossOver
translates Windows commands into Mac ones on the fly — like hiring an
interpreter to help you in a foreign country, rather than learning the
language yourself. It’s based on the open-source WINE project, but its
improvements to standard WINE make it a lot easier for everyday users to
successfully run.
CrossOver 22 is only available from Codeweavers' web site.
$74 gets you a full copy and a year’s worth of updates to the app. Once
that period elapses, you can still use the copy you already have as
long as you want to, but you won’t be able to download fresh updates.
You'll have a limited window of time after your subscription expires to
renew it for roughly $30.
You can also pay $494 for CrossOver Life, which removes the need for
annual renewals. The company tends to offer once-a-year discounts around
Black Friday, sometimes slashing the cost of a year's updates to as
little as $15.
After a quick installation, CrossOver does most of the hard work for
you. It sets up a “bottle” — a contained virtual environment — in which
you can install basic Windows or Linux underpinnings, plus any apps
you’d care to run. CrossOver builds in shortcuts to install popular apps
like Steam,
and it can seamlessly install apps from the Internet, from downloaded
ISO files, or from a physical disc, should you have an external drive.
You
can have multiple separate bottles for different apps, or put all the
apps you use in a single vessel. As with containerized software setups
like Docker,
this makes CrossOver easier and less stressful to use. In the unlikely
event that something goes horribly wrong inside a bottle, it won’t
affect your larger system. You can just delete the bottle and start
fresh.
CrossOver 22’s biggest leap forward lies in its overhauled interface.
Each
new version of CrossOver offers under-the-hood improvements to help all
apps in general and specific titles in particular run better. But
CrossOver 22’s biggest leap forward lies in its overhauled interface.
Previous
versions hid important toggles and features behind poorly designed
contextual menus. CrossOver 22 takes its design cues instead from the
Mac App Store, putting crucial options in full view. It’s easier than
ever to run apps you’ve already installed, or add new ones.
Codeweavers’
database of popular apps and their compatibility, maintained by
volunteer testers, is now more directly integrated into the app itself,
rather than requiring a separate visit to Codeweavers's web site. That
database isn’t comprehensive — some titles I’ve personally used under
CrossOver aren’t included — but it’s a good place to start when you’re
curious about whether a particular app will run there.
The path between original Windows code and successful Mac execution
isn’t always straight. For instance, Windows games use a set of tools
known as DirectX to enable 3D graphics. CrossOver has to pass those
commands through an open-source translator called DXVK, which maps them
to the open-source Vulkan 3D standard. These Vulkan commands must then
go through another interpreter, MoltenVK, to run under Apple’s own 3D toolkit, Metal.
Each of these handoffs eats up processing power and makes the
resulting games run slower and less reliably than they would if coded
for the Mac from the get-go.
The beefier your processing power,
the better performance you’ll get from CrossOver. Even though it’s an
Intel native app, it runs best on Apple silicon under Rosetta 2 emulation,
thanks to the sheer horsepower of the M1 and higher. (CrossOver plans
to eventually support Apple silicon, but Codeweavers says that
transition is likely years away.) Popular launcher apps like Steam, and
simpler 2D games like Guacamelee, ran without a hitch in my tests, but more sophisticated titles had various degrees of tradeoffs.
If
you want to game with CrossOver, having more than 8GB RAM or something
more powerful than a basic M1 will likely serve you well.
When I ran 2017’s Star Wars: Battlefront II on my stock M1 Mac Mini,
the game looked great. But depending on the game mode and the size and
type of the environments I found myself in, performance ranged from fast
and fluid to an unplayable crawl. I’ve seen YouTube videos of other
CrossOver users playing the game much more smoothly, even on levels that
choked my computer. If you want to game with CrossOver, having more
than 8GB RAM or something more powerful than a basic M1 will likely
serve you well.
Furthermore, Metal has different aims and
priorities than DirectX, trading some measure of tech sophistication for
the ability to run across MacOS, iOS, and tvOS. Even under Apple’s
recently announced Metal 3, there are just some things DirectX does for
which Metal lacks an easily translated equivalent.
Though
the game mostly ran smoothly barring some pauses for loading, the world
around my protagonist rendered as a mass of flickering black triangles.
I saw this firsthand playing Jedi: Fallen Order.
Though the game mostly ran smoothly barring some pauses for loading,
the world around my protagonist didn’t render right, presenting a mass
of flickering black triangles instead of realistic surroundings. I was
able to adapt and still enjoy the game, but if you’re looking for
absolute fidelity, consider this fair warning.
And even if
everything else goes swimmingly, there are some facets of Windows
software that just won’t work outside that platform, no matter what.
Barring some miracle in a future version, I’ll never know how well Star Wars: Squadrons
runs on CrossOver, because the anti-cheating software for its
multiplayer mode won’t cooperate, shutting down every attempt to install
the game.
ntel Macs can directly install Windows through Boot Camp, but this option isn't available on newer Apple Silicon-powered Macs.
Virtual machines like VMWare Fusion and Parallels Desktop
let Mac users run Windows and its apps. By emulating the entire Windows
operating system, they offer better compatibility with more kinds of
PC apps, especially games.
Both apps are Apple Silicon native and
can, with various degrees of workarounds, run Apple Silicon-friendly
ARM-based versions of Windows 11 (and their apps) natively. CrossOver
tops out at apps for Windows 10, and because of the engineering
complexities involved, Codeweavers says it won't offer a native Apple
Silicon version for several more years.
But Parallels and VMWare
each cost more than a year of CrossOver updates, and neither will work
without a copy of Windows itself. Even an older version of that can run
you as much as $140.
CrossOver 22 is impressive in its simplicity — at least in terms of how
easy it is to get select Windows applications up and running on macOS.
It's by no means perfect, and your mileage will vary dramatically
depending on the complexity of the applications you're looking to run,
not to mention the power of your Mac computer itself. But with prudent
use of the free trial to test your must-work apps, it's a great
opportunity to bridge the gap between Apple and Microsoft's computing
worlds.
Run Microsoft Windows Applications and Games on Mac, Linux or ChromeOS save up to 20% off CodeWeavers CrossOver+ today.