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  • CrossOver Games Preview & Benchmarks

    Phoronix: CrossOver Games Preview & Benchmarks

    While we're continuing to see new Linux-native games introduced (such as the recent Shadowgrounds announcement) and the continued work by Linux Game Publishing with different games, the Linux gaming market is still far from being saturated and it keeps many gamers from even trying out Linux because of the limited choices. As they near version 1.0, WINE has been making strides at allowing gamers to run their Windows game binaries on Linux and last year Transgaming had introduced Cedega 6.0 with expanded game support -- among other improvements. Today though another option has been introduced and that is using CrossOver Games to run your favorite Windows games on Linux.

    Phoronix, Linux Hardware Reviews, Linux hardware benchmarks, Linux server benchmarks, Linux benchmarking, Desktop Linux, Linux performance, Open Source graphics, Linux How To, Ubuntu benchmarks, Ubuntu hardware, Phoronix Test Suite

  • #2
    Just wanted to give my experiences with Crossover Games yesterday. First off, i'll state my system specs:

    HP m8120n
    Intel Quad Q6600
    4GB DDR2 667 ram
    2x320GB Seagate Sata2 drives
    eVga Nvidia Geforce 8800GT 512MB

    At the time, I didn't have Linux installed on my system, so i downloaded the new Kubuntu 8.04 64-bit release and installed it fresh on that.

    My main reason for gaming in Linux is to get Team Fortress 2 running as close to Windows as possible.

    The initial install went fine, so I grabbed my Orange Box, popped the cd in and followed the instructions. Everything went flawless.

    After the install, launched TF2, configured my controls, changed the resolution to my native 1650x1080, and launched an online game. The FPS wasn't bad at all, somewhere around 40-50, but everything was pretty ugly. When I attempted to change my graphical settings to increase the texture detail, my FPS dropped to around 10FPS in an online game with a server of 29 other people. Playing at the default settings are possible, but its really ugly, and even basic things like an opponent uber charge looks corrupted.

    I tried messing around with some other settings, forcing DirectX9 and 9.1 from the command line, which would load fine, but the texture detail was on low, as soon as you set it to high, the game defaulted back to directx 7 hardware detected and it wouldn't render anything. No surprise really, they say on the codeweaver forums that dx9 is buggy at best.

    So, a quick breakdown of my experiences:

    There are definite improvements with this over Crossover Office 6.2. The mouse click bug is fixed, which affected me greatly because i use Left-mouse to shoot and right-mouse to move forward, so i couldn't move forward and shoot at the same time. Microphone support is finally there, not great, but better than nothing. The performance is better than 6.2, and way better than anything else available for Linux.

    When I get home today, I'm going to try a 32-bit ubuntu install and see if that makes any difference, probably not, but worth a try.

    So, I will probably buy this, even though it's not fully functional for my use, but the 1 year of free upgrades is a definite bonus. Coming from donating $5 a month to Transgaming for 2 years and seeing no improvments in any games I play (HL2, TF2, Guildwars), I will definitly cough up the money for a working product.


    And, if anyone has any suggestions on tweaks for 8800GT card, or with crossover games, let me know

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    • #3
      Interesting, I look forward to this because it will only help the Wine project. Unlike Transgaming, Codeweavers will actually give some code back to the Wine project. That and if I were to choose between Cedega and Crossover Games, I'd choose Crossover Games in a heartbeat.

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      • #4
        Originally posted by Malikith View Post
        Interesting, I look forward to this because it will only help the Wine project. Unlike Transgaming, Codeweavers will actually give some code back to the Wine project. That and if I were to choose between Cedega and Crossover Games, I'd choose Crossover Games in a heartbeat.
        /+1.
        Once Crossover Games matures a-bit, I'll purchase it.

        - Gilboa
        oVirt-HV1: Intel S2600C0, 2xE5-2658V2, 128GB, 8x2TB, 4x480GB SSD, GTX1080 (to-VM), Dell U3219Q, U2415, U2412M.
        oVirt-HV2: Intel S2400GP2, 2xE5-2448L, 120GB, 8x2TB, 4x480GB SSD, GTX730 (to-VM).
        oVirt-HV3: Gigabyte B85M-HD3, E3-1245V3, 32GB, 4x1TB, 2x480GB SSD, GTX980 (to-VM).
        Devel-2: Asus H110M-K, i5-6500, 16GB, 3x1TB + 128GB-SSD, F33.

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by gilboa View Post
          /+1.
          Once Crossover Games matures a-bit, I'll purchase it.

          - Gilboa
          Don't forget that when you purchase Crossover Games, you get free updates for a year. This was the final selling point for me. Unlike Cedega that will keep taking your money weather they release something or not.

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          • #6
            The biggest difference is that Codeweavers directy contribues to the wine project - Transgameing uses a differnt branch which does not help to improve wine at all. Of course they could add more "hacks" that way but the "cleaner" way is to improve wine directy. That of course means that the free wine releases will get better too.

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            • #7
              Originally posted by cquilliam View Post
              Don't forget that when you purchase Crossover Games, you get free updates for a year. This was the final selling point for me. Unlike Cedega that will keep taking your money weather they release something or not.
              well, cedega just takes 3 months of pay and you should be able to run also new games that get out after the engine is released.
              i personally would preffer wine since it's free. it's more difficult to install stuff than with cedega and codeweavers but once installed it doesn't perform less than the other 2.

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              • #8
                From my experiences, Crossover is well worth the money. I went a little over two years paying for Cedega subscription only to not see any improvements in the one game I wanted to play, and it was Guildwars a "supported" game according to them.

                I am basing my opinions right now on Team Fortress 2, which under Crossover Games runs almost perfect compared to Wine or Cedega. Last night playing, I got 60-70 fps with ever graphical setting on max (except HDR), and it ran perfectly. However, I do understand that this is most likely not the case for all games, but, its well worth the money for me, and it will only get better.

                And then there's the warm and fuzzy feeling of in-directly contributing to the wine project

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by givemesugarr View Post
                  i personally would preffer wine since it's free. it's more difficult to install stuff than with cedega and codeweavers but once installed it doesn't perform less than the other 2.
                  The benchmarks starting on page 4 appear to show otherwise, especially the Lobby one.

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                  • #10
                    it would have been cool if XP was included in the benchmarks since the majority of windows users still use it and not vista.

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