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C: in Proton (or WINE) will refer exclusively to the "fake Windows" folder within the specific "prefix" of the game it's installed in, where in the case of Origin, you probably installed that from outside of Steam, so it'll be an entirely different folder from the one within Steam, as each game in Steam using Proton creates a private prefix for each specific game.
D: in Proton (or WINE) is often linked to the first optical (DVD/CD/etc) drive found, probably to ease installation of games which come on optical disc (as most games did before things like Steam and broadband internet killed physical game sales).
I'm not sure what "extra permissions" you're talking about, but you're apparently trying to run an Origin based game from within Steam using Proton? Is this game installed on a Windows-formatted (NTFS) partition/drive, or on a Linux (EXT3 or 4 for example) formatted drive? You're trying to save the bandwidth of downloading it again? One way you might be able to do this would be to start the install/download in Steam (to create the base folder structure) then pause/stop that download, copy the correct files from your other partition/drive into the proper place in the new folder, then verify the game (causing it to download only those files which differ from Steam's version, or which are not in the Origin version you already have). That might do what you hope.
Congrats on accomplishing your goal. Glad to hear you had some success there.
Lutris is actually a rather convenient little tool for runnin' stuff like this, but it doesn't always give you quite the same convenience as Steam does, so it's nice to be able to get those external games added into Steam properly sometimes. Can't at all blame you for wantin' to try. Glad you did get it running, but Proton ain't always the "magic bullet" solution any more'n Lutris is… Not sure why them folk would be annoyed at you trying something else besides Lutris. I mean, it's your game, and your computer. Only seems logical that if you wanna run it in Proton on Steam, that shouldn't be all that bizarre.
Sometimes there's other things you can do to improve performance in WINE/Proton games though. Is sometimes worth researching on WINE HQ and Proton DB to see what other folk may have done which helped them improve things for a particular game. Regarding "a different chat program", I've had fairly decent luck just using Discord for everything. Might be worth trying, although it doesn't help with "in game" text chat, it can be nice to just talk to folk you're playin' with and not need to type while you're trying to play a game.
"Thin Setup" is what the Battlefield games (1, 3, and 5) installed when I ran those in Proton. It was buggy and annoying at first, but once I did get it goin' right it all ran fine from then on out. Beat all three (single player campaigns) beginning to end entirely in Proton without issue.
I've never personally tried VM with GPU passthrough, but from what I hear it's about as close as you can possibly get to running on "bare metal" Windows while still staying in Linux and sandboxing your Windows to a VM. I just really don't want Windows on any of my machines at all anymore, even in a VM, so it's not really tempted me to try it, but everything I hear says you should have great success with those games which cannot run at all in Proton/WINE for whatever reasons (DRM/Anti-Cheat, mostly). If you have a working copy of Windows and proper hardware to do the thing, it's certainly a perfectly valid option to consider for those few (increasingly rare) games.
while great, if you intend to run games with anti-cheat, you should set them up not only with GPU pass-through, but also with USB pass-through (probably only possible from an add-on board) and the VM's own keyboard and mouse plugged to the dedicated USB ports...
not doing so means the VM-mediated input can be detected by some AC solutions as an attempt to intercept and modify your input, somenthing commonly used by cheaters too