Original title: Wine 11 rewrites how Linux runs Windows games at the kernel level, and the speed gains are massive.
Article
Steam now reports Linux above five percent of its user base, with Windows 10 end-of-support and the Steam Deck cited as accelerants for desktop adoption. The article argues that Linux gaming’s major advance is now kernel-level work rather than only Wine-side translation, while Wine and Proton remain the foundation. It describes NTSYNC as a Linux kernel driver that adds native support for Windows synchronization primitives, letting Wine/Proton handle those API calls without emulation. The piece frames this as part of a longer pattern in which Linux absorbs Windows-needed features, such as native multi-event waiting, after years of workaround-heavy compatibility layers. It also notes that headline FPS gains were measured versus upstream Wine that most users do not run, so real-world deltas versus fsync are smaller and most visible in previously weak titles. The source distinguishes performance from reliability, saying fsync-era implementations could trigger edge-case hitches or deadlocks that hurt gameplay despite good average frame rates. Valve’s move to ship NTSYNC in stable SteamOS is presented as a strategic signal that Linux gaming is no longer fringe and that kernel improvements benefit major distributions like Bazzite, CachyOS, Fedora, and Ubuntu alike. The article closes by reinforcing that the trend is now ecosystem-backed platform work, with incentives rising as the Linux share grows.
Commenters broadly confirm that many games now work well through Proton, including older titles on older hardware, and praise the convenience of distributions like Bazzite and the broad mod ecosystem support. Several users report daily usability gains, such as seamless play, quick resume on Linux laptops, and cross-platform tooling like compiling Windows binaries and running them through Proton. There is optimistic support for Linux as a serious gaming platform, with some arguing that anti-cheat and streaming economics could finally push mainstream adoption. Others are not convinced of full parity and ask for identical-machine comparisons with Windows including frametime, latency, and broader benchmarks. A recurring objection is that Windows anti-cheat solutions still block many competitive games, leaving players with Windows for specific titles. Many comments describe NTSYNC as primarily a correctness and stability improvement rather than a universal performance breakthrough, matching the article’s framing versus fsync. Several participants connect the change to broader kernel modernization, predicting deeper Windows-API-style compatibility and benefits for native Linux software as well. The thread ranges from practical success stories to skepticism and frustration about current Windows behavior, without consensus on a full migration timeline.