Bottles is a GPL3 licensed, amazing tool to use in Linux operating systems that support flatpaks. It allows one to interface with Wine without having to tinker with complicated prefixes and possibly polluting your file system and packages.
If a video game you want to play is not available on Steam's DRM store or you have a local copy of it, you can easily use Bottles to be able to run those games and integrate them into your desktop.
Flathub store page: https://flathub.org/apps/com.usebottles.bottles
Source repository: https://github.com/bottlesdevs/Bottles
*Winblows games that refuse to run under WINE are not included.
Very interesting! Though I will say that Proton (Valve's custom build of wine) works on non steam games as well.
It does! In bottles you can add Wine-Proton-GE as your wine version from the user interface or from ProtonUp-Qt
Some games may require minor tweaks which may require you to download a bunch of files outside of steam. It’s why I prefer to have launchers that use Proton but also gives you a menu of options and features rather than having me search for them one by one
I could've sworn people were more likely to recommend Lutris over Bottles, but I guess I'm going off of old info.
And as an aside, Wine also works on MacOS and the BSDs. It's not just Linux.
Lutris is good if you enjoy using the runners and install scripts (and are already invested in Lutris). But I think bottles has a simpler interface (using and installing) for new users and the project is in very active development compared to Lutris. Plus it integrates really well with the GNOME desktop.
Wine also works on MacOS and the BSDs. It's not just Linux.
Whoops, forgot about that. Thanks for pointing that out.