this post was submitted on 07 Jun 2025
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Linux Gaming

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I don't even know if this is allowed here but frankly, I don't care. I have seen conflicting guides on how to play cracked games. Some say to use lutris/wine, some say to use proton with steam and add the cracked games to steam though that carries a significant risk of a ban. So to all Linux pirates, how do you do this?

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[–] darkguyman@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I have two questions: First, can I skip the first step if the game is preinstalled? Second, how do you determine compatibilty? I don't want to spent days downloading/torrenting a game only for it to be completely incompatiable.

[–] rtxn@lemmy.world 6 points 1 day ago (1 children)

If the game comes in an archive (like portable Windows applications), you can simply copy the files to a directory and point Lutris at the executable.

Compatibility has been pretty solid for me. There are only a few games that didn't work out of the box (excepting those that are intentionally broken through anti-cheat). You can often get away with running games on Wine, but for most games you'll want Proton. Lutris will detect and use Proton versions that are installed by Steam, copied manually into compatibilitytools.d, or it can download Wine and Proton releases on its own. There's also GloriousEggroll's fork with many game-specific fixes.

ProtonDB and Lutris.net are the most useful resources, you can check if the anti-cheat solution might be an issue on Are We Anti-Cheat Yet?, Steam forum is a thing that exists, and you can ask in this community.

[–] darkguyman@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 15 hours ago (1 children)

Thanks, I didn't know that Lutris used proton when necessary. I don't need steam to run lutris's versions of proton, right?

[–] cevn@lemmy.world 1 points 1 hour ago

You shouldn’t need Steam but protonup-qt can be used to manage lutris proton