Wine development has grown by leaps and bounds, but unfortunately, that's been from utter garbage to a sometimes passable API. You'll almost surely need to execute some or all of the suggestions on http://appdb.winehq.org/objectManager.php?sClass=version&iId=9194 for Guild Wars, including reading up on all the bugs.

Aside from Guild Wars, you may benefit from some of the modifications from http://wiki.winehq.org/winetricks . I've never really gotten anything to work without importing a dozen or so .dll files from Windows XP and turning on native mode for them. There used to be problems with the installer that came with wine, which caused it to skip certain registry keys. So I had to take a Windows install of the program, export its registry keys, then import them into my wine environment.

Wine has gotten a lot better, but until they add features like working anti-aliasing, back-buffering, and predictable sound output, my games are running on Windows. I used to run EVE on Wine at 0.5fps, whereas on Windows, it was close to 300fps. I played with all sorts of options and dll files, read every forum entry and every workaround, and never found an answer besides Wine fundamentally doesn't support back-buffering, which is used extensively by EVE. So I gave up. Maybe Wine will finally implement all of DirectX 9 by the time all games require DirectX 10...

-Eric Hattemer


Jason Axelson wrote:
I haven't tried it on World of Warcraft but I've been having trouble
getting to run Guild Wars.  Which is odd because Guild Wars is on the
Platinum list so it should work without any configuration.

On Fri, Jul 4, 2008 at 11:29 AM, Peter Besenbruch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
    I recently experimented with Wine 1.0 under Ubuntu 8.04.  I was
utterly amazed at running World of Warcraft perfectly and at a stunning
speed under an older P4 with a mediocre AGP card.  Everything works.
Even the sound is flawless.  There are quite a few other apps listed in
the Wine DB.  It's really come a long way.
I'm still waiting for it to run Word Perfect 10, or Microsoft Publisher 98. It
tends to work on graphics programs, and rather imperfectly on a Windows 3 era
dictionary. I still run the dictionary, because it's good, and I put up with
the display imperfections.

--
Hawaiian Astronomical Society: http://www.hawastsoc.org
HAS Deepsky Atlas: http://www.hawastsoc.org/deepsky
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