https://bugs.winehq.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42729
--- Comment #7 from Fincer fincer89@hotmail.com --- Created attachment 57724 --> https://bugs.winehq.org/attachment.cgi?id=57724 Wolcen testrun // wine-staging-git (29/03/2017), 64-bit prefix
Yeah, I agree. The same output message appeared with Rise of The Tomb Raider as well. I'm not using any registry overrides for D3D/OpenGL.
After you pointed that out, I thought twice and decided to start all over again, just to make sure the test would be as clean as possible. I downloaded wine-staging-git and compiled it again. Deleted the existed 64-bit Steam prefix with the game in it and reinstalled everything.
I ran the game again. Test results as an attachment (testrun log).
--------------------- Testrun explanation:
The log starts with launching the Steam client, and ends as I had to kill Wolcen.exe process manually.
Once the game is launched, it starts with loading stuff and showing a series of splash screens before main menu. I accessed the main menu and immediately went to "Character selection" submenu (reference: Wolcen: Corrupted graphics - 1), returned to the main menu and quitted the game. The whole session took approximately some 30 seconds (of which the loading/splash screen part took the most time).
--------------------- Testing environment:
- Windows version: Windows 10 - 64-bit prefix - No DLL overrides. No Staging tweaks enabled in winecfg.
- Wine Git version, latest d3d11 commit included (as a time reference): "d3d11: Validate stream output buffer strides." - Date: 29/03/2017
My first idea was to perform the same test with normal Wine git version, excluding all staging patches. However, I was not even able to launch the Steam client with it, so well...here we are. Sadly, I couldn't test the game that way.
--------------------- Hardware info:
Asus N56JR laptop with Intel HD4000 + Nvidia GTX 760M.
'optirun' command must be used in order to run the game, it just doesn't work with vanilla Intel Card. I'm using the latest 378.13 Nvidia drivers from Arch Linux repositories. The system is up-to-dated.