29
May
May
Windows Games Run Faster on Linux than on Windows Vista
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WINE is an implementation of the Win32 API on Linux, so that you can
run programs written for Windows on your GNU/Linux installation. It
normally reeks of office applications, spreadsheets and polka-dotted
ties. Cedega, then, is a commercial version of WINE optimized for
games. It runs a larger library of Windows games than plain WINE can.
So far, so good, right? Now, common sense might dictate that the games
should run slower in WINE or Cedega, because those things are busy
translating the Windows-nonsense the games speak into something that
GNU/Linux can understand, and that surely costs performance, no?
run programs written for Windows on your GNU/Linux installation. It
normally reeks of office applications, spreadsheets and polka-dotted
ties. Cedega, then, is a commercial version of WINE optimized for
games. It runs a larger library of Windows games than plain WINE can.
So far, so good, right? Now, common sense might dictate that the games
should run slower in WINE or Cedega, because those things are busy
translating the Windows-nonsense the games speak into something that
GNU/Linux can understand, and that surely costs performance, no?
Common sense is wrong. These benchmarks
say that GNU/Linux with Cedega or WINE runs the tested games 33 – 40%
faster than Windows Vista. 40%! That’s not just the fraction of fps
that the hardcore crowd lusts for, that’s a significant number.
So the best modern platform to play Windows games on is not Windows but GNU/Linux? Creepy.
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