Didn't use Wine much lately, but when I do i use usually 2 prefixes; one for 32, one for 64 bit. Winetricks is often helpful; so is the appdb on WineHQ.
Have fun!
Valve is a wonderful contributor to Linux. Look what a beautiful wooden horse they have gifted to us!
Take this with a grain of salt - I'm no academic musician: By the time Nevermind was done, there were afaik easier techniques for the composition of popsongs available. Also, using the "contrapoint"-principe would probably have resulted in either quite outworn or very unusual compositions - the counterpoint was used to evade dissonance, but in the 90s dissonances were common in rock music. An example for a modern musician who vocally used the contrapoint technique in a modern way was "Moondog": https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I7TPYWD8LUY https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RW8SBwGNcF8
You should change your Distribution. Arch is a rolling release distribution with a strong focus on customization. If you use binaries shipped by another source, problems like those you described are quite likely to happen. Going to a distribution that isn't that cutting edge (but still cutting edge enough to deliver working drivers/libs) would reduce the risk for such things.
In no particular order:
Online/LAN:
Xonotic: Good for online/LAN-play. UT-Style FPS.
OpenRA: Damn well good. RTS.
Warsow: Similar to Xonotic, but much faster. Damn good game. Sadly, defunct.
Sonic Robo Blast 2 Kart: If you like kart games and think they are all to easy, this is your choice.
Online/Split Screen/Couch coop:
SuperTuxKart: Damn fun, especially with a few add on tracks and good company at your place.
Hedgewars: Similar to Worms: Armageddon.
Battle for Wesnoth: Really fun once in a while. Neither the online nor the local experience is really "better".
Offline/Split Screen/Couch Coop:
Atomic Tanks: Worms on steroids.
Barbarian: Rocks. The OSS-Version is a tad bit obscure.
I didn't do VCMI, but Homm3 is one of my big local multiplayer favorites. I wait for the full inclusion of WoG before shooting it up. Also, as a young boi I really loved C-Dogs. The thing is now open source, check it out.
Some of his works are created by deliberately (and sometimes targeted) breaking of hardware; this technique is called "circuit bending" :)