How can I get Wine to work on Linux Mint?

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Asked By LoneWolf123 On

I installed Wine through the Software Manager on Linux Mint, but when I try to launch it, nothing happens and I can't find it anywhere on my system. If Wine can only be launched through the terminal, could anyone suggest a user-friendly GUI I can use to run Windows programs more easily, similar to how Steam manages games?

5 Answers

Answered By TechGuru99 On

Wine doesn't function like a typical game launcher (like Steam); it runs Windows executables by translating their API calls to Linux, which means launching Wine alone won't do anything. For a better experience, check out Lutris. It's a great graphical frontend that helps run Windows applications through Wine.

Answered By QuickFixX2 On

Have you tried using Bottles? It's another option to manage Wine installations and might simplify things for you.

UserFan01 -

I tried Bottles, but all it does is show "launching mspaint.exe" and then nothing happens.

LinuxNewbie42 -

I just installed Bottles; I'll see how it goes.

Answered By CommandLineNinja On

How do you feel about using the Terminal? Running commands there can often sort issues with Wine.

LoneWolf123 -

I'm still getting used to it. When I typed 'wine mspaint.exe', it said 'Application could not be started or no application associated with the specified file.'

Answered By VirtualHunter On

If all else fails, consider running Windows 10 in a VM (like GNOME Boxes). Give it at least 8GB of RAM and around 80GB for storage. But I get it; you might not want a whole Windows setup just for Paint.

MinimalistUser -

Yeah, I really don’t want a full Windows VM just for MS Paint.

Answered By InquisitiveDev On

What exactly are you attempting to run with Wine? That might help narrow down the best approach.

LoneWolf123 -

I want to run MS Paint from this link: https://archive.org/details/MSPaintWin10, but it keeps crashing when I try.

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