Welp, it’s finally happened. Windows 10 has become so bloated, slow, and spooky that I finally have decided to bite the bullet and set up a VM on my linux Mint partition. Do you have any suggestions for a virtual machine? My PC is a relatively basic mid-range business laptop, 8gb of ram, no GPU, only a few years old. I’m a little concerned about performance impact, as I’ve heard that VMs take more system resources than the OS running natively. Any recommendations of software/configurations that would work best for me?
EDIT for clarity: The games i intend to run are, largely, older non-steam games. i obviously just use proton for all my steam games, but some weird older ones don’t have a steam release/i don’t have the steam version.
My suggestion: Don’t.
As far as I am aware a VM only makes sense for gaming if you have a second GPU. And even then it’s a pain in the arse.
Use Proton/Wine instead. Steam has that integrated so that most games just work out of the box.
Be aware, most modern games won’t run well or at all if you only have integrated graphics.
And most anti-cheates won’t play nice with VMs, unless you’re Nvidia.
GPU passthrough is possible if you only have one, but it’s TWO pains in the arse to set up and operate
And you kinda lose most of the benefits apart from a little more sandboxing. If you have to log off your whole session to switch to the VM it’s just extra complicated dual booting.
You don’t necessarily have to. I know it’s possible to partially forward GPU hardware to a virtual machine for many Nvidia (vGPU) and Intel (GVT-g) GPUs. With Looking Glass you don’t even need to switch back and forth between VM and host.
This method is finicky as hell and the Linux code that enables this is extremely unstable in my experience, but people have got it working. GPU forwarding with a single GPU is technically and practically possible assuming your hardware is supported by the drivers.