It seems the game auto-installs xlive when you install it.
I tried copying the folder of Fallout 3 to a fresh wine installation, and it asked for xlive

You don't install xlive , fallout 3 installer does but you figured that out already.sjbayer3 wrote:fyi I never installed any xlive
-Right now 1.1.6, but tried lot of em and its all the same.dayosh wrote:Well, let's (the three of us) try to align our settings and such, so that at least we're all working on the same page, as it were. Now, dyzmani9 & keisangi:
-What version of Wine are you running?
-What sorts of things (mainly wine tricks applications) do you have installed?
- Do you have the directx9 libraries cataloged in your winecfg?
Any of these answers, and any others you can think of that might be relevant, might help all of us to establish a "starting point" that we can further build upon.
ehem .. now this hurts ! linux *IS* for gamingdyzmani9 wrote: Linux aint for gaming. And probably will never be, theres gonna always be new problems, I wish I am wrong though....
Well, I guess youre right about this 'native' stuff, but it wont pay off for them to make games for linux as soon as I would like to...I just checked out wikipedia's 'Games for linux' section, most of them are old games, and half of the ports made by fans...tuxfusion wrote:ehem .. now this hurts ! linux *IS* for gamingdyzmani9 wrote: Linux aint for gaming. And probably will never be, theres gonna always be new problems, I wish I am wrong though....
Games developed FOR linux are at least as powerful as their competition :
See etqw :
http://zerowing.idsoftware.com/linux/etqw/
or americas army native linux client:
http://americasarmy.filefront.com/file/ ... 6#Download
Your statement is simply wrong because you are running a *native* windows game on a completely different operating system and you now blame the second operating system for failing to be windows , pretty funny =)
This would be like starting the X server on Windows and blaming Windows that it can't run the linux X server ...
You as a customer should blame Bethesda for *NOT* developing a linux client and only them no one else , as soon as it will pay off for those companies to develop for linux too they will do it.
In the meantime it's either wine with thousands of running apps or dual boot for apps that are still at "garbage" state.
*lol everytime i write there is a falllout 3 commercial in our tv , hehe*
You can always install Windows XP on a virtual machine. VMware Workstation supports DirectX 9.dyzmani9 wrote:Gotta install XP again (just for gaming), dual boot and get rid of my headache. I just dont see any other option. Dont get me wrong, I would love to get rid of that wincrap once for all and never install it again but what i see Linux aint for gaming. And probably will never be, theres gonna always be new problems, I wish I am wrong though....
You still need a licensed copy of WindowsXP to run with VMWare. Onedyzmani9 wrote:
You can always install Windows XP on a virtual machine. VMware Workstation supports DirectX 9.Gotta install XP again (just for gaming), dual boot and get rid of my headache. I just dont see any other option. Dont get me wrong, I would love to get rid of that wincrap once for all and never install it again but what i see Linux aint for gaming. And probably will never be, theres gonna always be new problems, I wish I am wrong though....
But what i read, games dont work too good on vmwared windows. What i understand is it rather emulates a graphic card than uses your own, poor performance, no shaders (so bye bye F3)etc etc. Good for everything but gaming.Fazer wrote:You can always install Windows XP on a virtual machine. VMware Workstation supports DirectX 9.dyzmani9 wrote:Gotta install XP again (just for gaming), dual boot and get rid of my headache. I just dont see any other option. Dont get me wrong, I would love to get rid of that wincrap once for all and never install it again but what i see Linux aint for gaming. And probably will never be, theres gonna always be new problems, I wish I am wrong though....
Hey,Fazer wrote:You can always install Windows XP on a virtual machine. VMware Workstation supports DirectX 9.dyzmani9 wrote:Gotta install XP again (just for gaming), dual boot and get rid of my headache. I just dont see any other option. Dont get me wrong, I would love to get rid of that wincrap once for all and never install it again but what i see Linux aint for gaming. And probably will never be, theres gonna always be new problems, I wish I am wrong though....
I know little about its performance in 3D games, I've only read about that feature.T1663R wrote:a long time ago i tryed the old vmware and everything was really slow, so if you say the new vmware workstation has dx9 support, are games playable that way or not ? i mean basicly its not great if you only got like 5 or 10 fps for example or something like that ...
It's useless and will be for the next years since no big company is putting money into it. Except vmware fusion for the mac that has some support.I know little about its performance in 3D games, I've only read about that feature.
Are you really sure that it's so useless? I didn't test it very thoroughly,It's useless and will be for the next years since no big company is puttingI know little about its performance in 3D games, I've only read about
that feature.
money into it. Except vmware fusion for the mac that has some support.
Everything else is pure software rendering !