Can you play NS2 on a mac through vm?
Locke504
Join Date: 2010-04-23 Member: 71511Members, NS2 Map Tester
My friend has a brand new macbook and was trying to play the game through vm.
The game installed and loaded fine but he can't select any options from the menu screen. Clicking "Play" for example does nothing.
Was wondering if anyone can confirm that the game does or doesn't work through a windows virtual machine.
The game installed and loaded fine but he can't select any options from the menu screen. Clicking "Play" for example does nothing.
Was wondering if anyone can confirm that the game does or doesn't work through a windows virtual machine.
Comments
This is a custom Engine...completely new...it's going to be probably a few months before anyone gets under the hood, seriously.
Also, do note that regardless of the hardware pass-through abilities, virtualization will always take a performance hit. The fact that your friend is using a macbook makes me feel inclined to say that the game will not run with him regardless of the maturity of the current virtualization technology since afaik macbooks don't really ship with anything better than a mid range mobile gpu
Also, do note that regardless of the hardware pass-through abilities, virtualization will always take a performance hit. The fact that your friend is using a macbook makes me feel inclined to say that the game will not run with him regardless of the maturity of the current virtualization technology since afaik macbooks don't really ship with anything better than a mid range mobile gpu<!--QuoteEnd--></div><!--QuoteEEnd-->
It's a brand new retina display macbook pro. Think he said it was running a 2.9ghz quad core. Can't remember the card, but it's got to be top-o-tha-line for whatever they're stuffing in those things these days.
But yeah, I don't really know much about how vm;s work for playing games. It's not to big an issue though, he has a PC back at the house apparently.
There are two other approaches that will provide a better experience in the long run. Those are WINE (simulate the windows API) and bootcamp (actually running windows directly on the Mac without virtualizing).
KVM, the linux kernal VM has PCIe passthrough which might sort of wind up being useful but once again i'm not sure what virtualisation options there are on osx.
tl:dr; 3d games don't work in vms unless you know what you're doing.
But yeah, I don't really know much about how vm;s work for playing games. It's not to big an issue though, he has a PC back at the house apparently.<!--QuoteEnd--></div><!--QuoteEEnd-->
When it comes to macs, top of the line means budget level video cards from 2 generations ago.
But yeah, I don't really know much about how vm;s work for playing games. It's not to big an issue though, he has a PC back at the house apparently.<!--QuoteEnd--></div><!--QuoteEEnd-->
I have never, ever heard of a macbook getting a top of the line mobile GPU mostly due to power consumption issues and form factor. Top end mobile GPU are usually reserved for 18"+ laptops with only an hour or 2 runtime, and in some rare cases, 17" laptops.
While I have no doubt anything Apple cost an arm and a leg, most of their products aren't geared towards gaming unless you count iOS apps