rmoomr: Great news on the one hand.
But on the other - no Linux version, and given that it doesn't even have winehq page it's difficult to guess if it will work on Wine without much struggle.
Is there any chance for the GOG linux version in the future?
Okay... Word of advice...
I don't know if you're new to this, or perhaps not versed enough... And quite frankly it doesn't matter...
What I am about to say is a general good info for Linux gamers regardless of experience level.
The WineHQ AppDB is at this moment (and as time passes even less so) NO INDICATION of current status of "if things work under Wine".
That is so for a number of reasons:
1.First of all Wine more or less refused to acknowledge DXVK, and at least for some time removed / moderated / made fuss about reports that included DXVK (they didn't see them as "valid"). So that filters off A LOT of proper reports from out there.
2.Even few years ago when DXVK wasn't a thing yet the WineHQ AppDB was a TOTAL wild west.
They kept closing valid bug reports for reasons such as "we don't talk about DRM related problems here" (for bug reports regarding Denuvo when bcrypt.dll wasn't implemented in Wine yet, those reports were TOTALLY legit, and should have not been closed as that LITERALY choked the progress and slowed it down).
3.Wine devs are a pretencious bunch that gets easily offended and turns their heads when some totally legit accusition shows up which they don't like. There are existing bugs that are TOTALLY ON WINE but they fail to acknowledge that and instead make a great deal of their own pissing contest in a form of "who should we blame next instead of fixing stuff". That slows down development and frustrates more knowledgable community members.
4.Close to nobody bothers to actually retest software with each (or even as little as every few) Wine release.
That literally makes it so that regressions are often discovered months later.
5.Large amount of page maintainers are more of a "pride and prejustice freeloaders" and they fail to do their task, NOT moderating trashy reports, NOT retesting software, NOT doing what they are supposed to.
6.There is a large percentage of reports that are useless garbage because they don't meet ANY software testing standards nor any reporting standards (laconic, no details, vague descriptions, etc).
7.There is a large percentage of reports that are even more useless. These are the special kind. The "I got lazy / I touched stuff without knowing how to deal with things / I didn't bother and only tested if it works out of the box" kind. The kind of reports where somebody reported "garbage" status for something that should have "bronze" or even much higher. Completely useless trash kind of report. Not only that but also VERY misleading one.
YOU HAVE NO IDEA how INSANELY misleading it was before DXVK was a thing (and that about marks when people started SERIOUSLY posting test runs on youtube in LARGE NUMBERS that are easily found without some mission impossible tag flexing queries). Back before DXVK was a thing there were plenty of pages where there weren't actually a lot of people in the WORLD who knew the ACTUAL progress status.
When average "not in the know" person visited a page and saw a nicely lined up stack of "garbage" reports such person generally thought "that software must really not work yet". WRONG. Just a bunch of incompetent morons decided to gung-ho botcher the reports.
8.Because of 5,6 and 7 there is a rather major amount of pages that tell NOTHING useful to average person and that whole place is a mess. That was a thing before DXVK. And it continues to be a thing especially now.
There are other reasons why that whole place is not useful now but this is getting lenghty and you should get the idea already.
This may be offensive to some people and anybody is free to engage into CONSTRUCTIVE argumentation.
But that's the sad truth. Even if cause was noble that entire page is close to useless now.
Unfortunatelly that is the reality.
If you (any of you linux gamers) want to get the actual idea then use these:
1. ProtonDB - there is rather large amount of reports there that actually are for non steam versions.
Plus steam versions of games generally don't differ much IF AT ALL in terms of "if they work on wine".
https://www.protondb.com/
2. Lutris - if there is a game page and there exists an install script then it means it at least "somewhat" works
https://lutris.net/games 3.Youtube - search for "game name dxvk" or "game name proton", preferably in recent months videos (to get idea about CURRENT state of things), there are some entire channels dedicated solely to test run videos.
Hope that helps :)
L.