http://bugs.winehq.org/show_bug.cgi?id=13632
--- Comment #9 from Roland Haeder roland@mxchange.org 2008-06-06 16:28:52 --- What I mean is that you may want to find out which kind of graphics card you have. A low-cost one or a better one. Low-cost cards still have a GeForce chip attached to the board but the other parts on the card like pipelines or RAM might sometimes be damaged. So the low-cost manufacturer is mostly reducing the bandwidth for data flow to avoid trouble in his own win32 drivers, prohibitory Linux kernel modules are mostly not shipped so you have to take the NVIDIA drivers if you want OpenGL working. If you do so these generic NVIDIA drivers will set normal (non-reduced) data bandwidth which causes the crash of the card.
The "solution" here is to buy a "class A" card, a better one where the manufacturer (like MSI or ASUS) has taken more care about his pipelines and RAM.
I hope this is now more clear to you what I want from you and why. :) I paid 100 EURO here, thats about $90, for my MSI card which is really a fair price for good quality.