• OP, I urge you to clarify and/or elaborate in case you desire better engagement. Like is your goal to make a long list of Wine-related software? Or, instead, understand which one is preferred?

    Furthermore, a more meta suggestion: a quick glance at your profile shows that you have almost three times as many posts compared to your comments. You’re free to engage however you wish. But please, consider engaging more with the community output. Thanks in advance!

  • Most distributions include Wine AFAICT yet I’d argue you shouldn’t use Wine because typically it means using proprietary software.

    If you are using Wine for games then it’s also reconsider that there are plenty of open source game you can still pay for to support their author.

    If you still want to play proprietary Windows games without native support then I would recommend to use a wrapper, e.g. Bottles (because of Proton, not because of the GUI) or even Steam (since you want to play proprietary Windows games anyway) as they’ll remove a layer of tinkering to find the right version, path, etc (basically prefix management).

    … but yeah, even though Wine is amazing I would argue every time one uses it, if they are using Linux because they want more agency, they probably should reconsider and search for a free software alternative instead. It will be awkward at first, other UI, other UX, new community, but it’s an investment in the future.

  • I don’t get the purpose of this post. The title and what you listed are not the same thing.

    You listed a mix of apps and wine versions, all those usually assume you already have wine to satisfy dependencies, that’s not how to install wine.

    You install wine (staging for gaming) from your distro repositories.

  • Install wine-staging through your package manager. Every tool you mentioned on relies on that or does something similar itself.

    That said, this is an XY problem - what are you actually trying to do?

  • Install wine-staging through your package manager.

    Install these extra programs if you need the things that they do.

  • I don’t really install it anymore. I use zorin which has wine and play on linux installed by default. I plan to try using bazzite which has steam and I assume enough installed for my casual uses of wine.

    • Zorin has Play on Linux by default? Hasn’t that project been dead for 5 years? Why are they still shipping it out of the box?

      • In their latest version they have a custom tool that seems to largely be using bottles but like that literally just came out. Before that they were using play on linux and I think their custom tool uses it still to some degree. I really don’t know much about their in house replacement and im still on their last version 17. They are made to be an easy to use out of the box distro so it was important to them folks could just right click and run windows programs.

  • What is your end goal? There are a lot of different ways to install Wine for different purposes.

    If it’s just to run a arbitrary binary, I use Heroic and add it as a non-Epic/Amazon game. Different Wine/Proton versions can be downloaded in the settings.

    You can also add them to Steam as non-steam game and enable compatibility mode in the settings.

    • ^^ Heroic worked really well for me as well. I used it to get Affinity working. (Apart from using it for Epic Games and GOG ofc.)

  • I suppose it depends mostly on what you intend to do.

    FWIW, Wine makes you potentially vulnerable to malware that targets M$ otherwise. As such, I prefer sandboxed solutions. This used to be Bottles for me. However, currently, I don’t have any need for it; I play my games through the Heroic flatpak and don’t need Wine outside of that.

  • The most basic version, just install from your distro’s repository if it has one. On Debian, Ubuntu, Mint, etc., for example, it"s sudo apt install wine.

    If you’re on Steam, just enable compatibility, and Steam will handle everything for you, though do note you can only use their version of Wine (“Proton”) when launching through their launcher or calling the executable file directly.

    If you’re on Heroic Launcher, there’s a menu for handling Wine versions, including downloading, and using is the same as Steam’s.

    Can’t remember other methods now.

  • Btw, is there a CLI utility to choose and keep a specific wine version? Some games have issues ranging from none over no ground texture to not launching at all from one update to the next. Some productive software too.