The AppDB lists Team Fortress 2 as Platinum. It says it should run "flawlessly out-of-the-box."
In Windows, I can max out all of the settings and get a steady 100+ FPS.
In Wine, I have to set everything to Low, and even then, I still only get 20-30 FPS, occasionally dropping down into the 0-10 range when multiple players are on the screen.
That doesn't sound flawless. Aside from the low FPS, I get many different graphical glitches, like black textures, lights shining through walls, and more.
Have I done something wrong? I'm running Wine 1.3.15 and Ubuntu 10.10 x64. I installed Steam, and all of my drivers are up-to-date.
Source Engine games - Low FPS (Wine 1.3.15)
Source Engine games - Low FPS (Wine 1.3.15)
On 3/16/11 3:15 PM, ebol4 wrote:
that definitely should not be in a Platinum rated game, so I have a few
questions:
1. What is your video card and driver version?
2. You stated you are using Ubuntu 10.10 64 Bit version and Wine
1.3.15, what what bitness of Wine are you using (you might be using the
64 bit version and it might be better to use the 32 bit version for
running Steam games, but the bitness should not make a difference.)
Can you please provide answers to these questions?
Thank you.
James McKenzie
Depends on your idea of 'flawless'. However, you are reporting problemsThe AppDB lists Team Fortress 2 as Platinum. It says it should run "flawlessly out-of-the-box."
that definitely should not be in a Platinum rated game, so I have a few
questions:
1. What is your video card and driver version?
2. You stated you are using Ubuntu 10.10 64 Bit version and Wine
1.3.15, what what bitness of Wine are you using (you might be using the
64 bit version and it might be better to use the 32 bit version for
running Steam games, but the bitness should not make a difference.)
Can you please provide answers to these questions?
Thank you.
James McKenzie
Also, see http://wiki.winehq.org/Performance
With Nvidia cards, Wine usually achieves something like 75% the
framerate of Windows, but results vary on different games and cards.
You might try "winetricks glsl-disable" if you have an nvidia card.
With Nvidia cards, Wine usually achieves something like 75% the
framerate of Windows, but results vary on different games and cards.
You might try "winetricks glsl-disable" if you have an nvidia card.
Tried the GLSL-disable thing, and it didn't make any noticeable difference.
I increased all the video settings to as high as they would go, and my FPS didn't go down or go up.
The thing that did make a difference was disabling sound. The game was noticeably more responsive and my FPS was a bit higher after that.
I increased all the video settings to as high as they would go, and my FPS didn't go down or go up.
The thing that did make a difference was disabling sound. The game was noticeably more responsive and my FPS was a bit higher after that.