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Windows 10 linux virtual machine
Windows 10 linux virtual machine












windows 10 linux virtual machine

It works well, except you have to switch between the operating systems by restarting them. One way to use the two systems together is to dual boot Windows and Linux.

windows 10 linux virtual machine

I just want what I want to do (play games) to work without hassle factor.I regularly encourage people to use Linux, and when I give them reasons to switch, I always mention that they can use Windows and Linux together if they’re ‘scared of Linux’. When I want to play, I don’t want to do work. At that point I have to wait, or try to debug it and fix it myself. On Linux, if I’m dealing with an issue, it might be me, it might be the patch, or the myriad of other layers causing issues. I also know that if I run into a problem on windows there’s a damn good chance that someone else has run into the same problem, or it’s not even something I can fix (e.g. But others along with with the anti-cheat issues, patches that come out causing issues, I just stick to windows. You have the “tinkerers” that are like “oh it works completely fine for me” yet they forget to explain that they spent 60 hours of tinkering to get it to work on a particular patch level that’s 4 years old. I would love to switch to Linux as a full time OS at home but between games that aren’t really supported on linux and the adobe suite, it’s near impossible. Obviously, takes a second video card and some setup.

windows 10 linux virtual machine

Just the graphics card pushes to a framebuffer that Linux reads directly and shows you on screen. Kind of a 'best of all worlds' setup it's fully, native Windows, with a full real graphics card. This combines the ability to use Windows like a VM, and also pass through a second video card on your system for performance in games. I play The Longest Journey (came out in 2003 or so) every couple years, and it performs well this way. Second, older games that don't care about graphical performance run fine in either DOSBox or a Windows VM. Swap back to Windows installed on another partition or drive on your computer just for that game, then reboot again to go back to Linux. However, if a game you have absolutely requires native Windows, there are still options.

windows 10 linux virtual machine

Give a quick check on ProtonDB to see what it takes to get things working: Between Wine, DXVK, and Proton, you have options on getting stuff running. Most games are now playable on Linux, even without native ports.














Windows 10 linux virtual machine