Morph9@lemmy.zip to linuxmemes@lemmy.worldEnglish · 13 days agoThat's the feeling.lemmy.zipexternal-linkmessage-square26linkfedilinkarrow-up11cross-posted to: programmer_humor@programming.dev
arrow-up11external-linkThat's the feeling.lemmy.zipMorph9@lemmy.zip to linuxmemes@lemmy.worldEnglish · 13 days agomessage-square26linkfedilinkcross-posted to: programmer_humor@programming.dev
minus-squareZwiebel@feddit.orglinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up0·13 days agoAnd you’re saying all those kernel-level anti-cheat games will happily run in a vm?
minus-squareCubitOom@infosec.publinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up0·13 days agoMost of them run in proton natively on Linux, but it does depend on the specific anticheat. You can check protondb to verify how well a game might work on Linux Personally, I boycott any game that comes with kernel level rootkits.
minus-squarertxn@lemmy.worldMlinkfedilinkarrow-up0·13 days agoSome of them will. It depends on which rootkit is used. There are some VM optimizations that applications can detect, but those can be disabled.
minus-squarejuipeltje@lemmy.worldlinkfedilinkarrow-up0·12 days agoYou can get them to work by enabling hyper-v inside the windows vm, but this kneecaps your cpu performance unfortunately. Might not always be an issue though depending on how powerful your cpu is and how demanding the actual game is.
And you’re saying all those kernel-level anti-cheat games will happily run in a vm?
Most of them run in proton natively on Linux, but it does depend on the specific anticheat.
You can check protondb to verify how well a game might work on Linux
Personally, I boycott any game that comes with kernel level rootkits.
Some of them will. It depends on which rootkit is used. There are some VM optimizations that applications can detect, but those can be disabled.
You can get them to work by enabling hyper-v inside the windows vm, but this kneecaps your cpu performance unfortunately. Might not always be an issue though depending on how powerful your cpu is and how demanding the actual game is.