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Descent 2 is one of my favorite.
https://store.steampowered.com/app/273580/Descent_2/
Store page shows up to Win 8.1, but it worked on Win 10.
It has support for Linux.
If you take route for alternatives, you may need to take extra effort including picking proper OS.
most pc such as laptop with 2,2 base core and intel boot to 3,4ghz actual dont have it.
intel boost cant keep 3,3 ghz so high all the time so it fail.
and no i dont recall what game from the past so many years ago.
and back then dual core issue as 2.0ghz wont even help. ( it was crazy time back then. )
thos games was made to use 1 cpu only, so you can actual still get issue with not have the single cpu requirements
No, I`ve never heard of it.
.exe games won’t run on basic Linux; which is most likely why they can’t be installed. The normal client doesn’t do the “emulation” automatically.
The Steam Deck runs Proton by default.
Linux-Steam comes with Proton, but I think "Chromebooks" are something else. If you can't install a Linux-Steam on a Chromebook then it's not that simple.
If you can install Wine/Proton on a Chromebook, the usual way is to then install the Windows-Steam-client inside of that. So, basically, you're already running a Windows-Steam inside the Windows-Emulation, so it will download the Windows games and also install therm inside the emulation.
For DOSBox, since you can't run a DOS-Steam, there's a lot of manual stuff going on. DOS games on Steam come with their own DOSBox-ish thing for that reason; you'd basically have to download the game on another box and extract the actual game from it, so you can then install it into the DOSBox on the Chromebook.
Frankly, seeing the initial post, I think that's all much too complicated. Just accept that Chromebooks aren't meant for games.