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Сообщить о проблеме с переводом
Though, Wine is actually rather hit-and-miss with games; some games work, some don't, and some play but have performance issues. Though, I believe that older games should work fine.
But, yeah, If you want to play your full game library currently, your best bet is to use Windows.
TL;DR Wine works pretty well (not perfect), and there are plenty of resources to use it; though I prefer to dual boot.
I'm hoping on a few game companies doing some ports, and game companies releasing new games with SteamOS/Linux.
- Wine will install and work fine, it will however be hit miss depending on the game and how much time you willing to play with it to get working. I have seem some games install and play with little effort and work better than on windows, though they are few and far between.
http://store.steampowered.com/browse/linux/
That is not quite correct.
With a combination of Wine / PlayOnLinux or CrossOver Office (both tested and work on SteamOS) and In-Home Streaming, SteamOS / Linux machines will be able to natively run or remotely access virtually all Windows and MacOS X applications and games.
The real desire, however, is for SteamOS / Linux to establish its own true native AAA game and software catalog. This is especially important when comparing Steam Machines to the Xbox One and Playstation 4, which are it's real competition.
If you install additional packages such as WINE you can emulate the windows features needed to run the game on the machine.
Alternativly you can also use in home streaming (I believe they just sent out another wave of beta e-mails). I have been using this myself for a couple weeks and it works EXCEDINGLY well. Ihave my gaming rig in my office and my work laptop (with intel card) in my living room on my TV and can play every game I have tried so far (Bioshock, Assasins Creed, Rougue Legacy, Batman Arkahm city) over streaming.
working out some kinks with the streaming in SteamOS (Resolutions) but thats why its a Beta.
So the answer is a Not nativly but there are other ways to do it.
This is why Valve is developing In-Home Streaming, where you can use your already existing Windows PC as a game server then just stream your games to your SteamOS Steam Machine over your home network.
Most of the 3rd party Steam Machines will come with an option to have Windows pre-installed alongside SteamOS, if you're willing to pay a little extra. You can also just build your own Steam Machine and put whatever you want in and on it. A Steam Machine is nothing more than a general gaming PC designed to fit next to your HDTV in a slim form-factor case, so the term "Steam Machine" can really refer to any small PC with a game controller.
I think SteamOS is more a result of Gabe Newell's distaste of Windows 8 and how Microsoft is attempting to encourage centralization of software distribution on Windows with the Windows Store. SteamOS is Valve's attempt to create a more open platform that it hopes to have more control over than Windows or OS X. As a Linux user, I can appreciate SteamOS but it will be interesting to see how Valve plans to make SteamOS appealing to general gamers who don't care about operating systems and just want to play their games, especially considering that Valve isn't planning any SteamOS exclusives.
Well it was actually possible to run Windows on the PS3 back before Sony removed the OtherOS feature from the firmware.
You first had to install a PPC flavor of GNU/Linux, such as Yellow Dog Linux then you could use the Qemu processor emulator app to install and run Windows XP via on-the-fly PPC to x86 machine instruction translation.
It wasn't useful because it ran impossibly slow but it could be done lol.