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Christopher Negus

"Linux Bible, 2008 Edition: Boot up to Ubuntu, Fedora, KNOPPIX, Debian, openSUSE, and 11 Other Distributions"

transgaming.org/gamesdb/).
Browse games by category or alphabetically. An asterisk marks games that are officially supported
by TransGaming. On each game description page is a link to a related Wiki Node, when one exists,
that gives you details about how well the game works under Cedega and tips for getting it to work
better.
Depending on your distribution, you may need to get the vanilla kernel from kernel.org
and boot that on your system before running games with Cedega. TransGaming has
added several new features to the Cedega GUI (formerly called Point2Play). The Cedega GUI provides
a graphical window for installing, configuring, and testing Cedega on your computer. This application
also lets you install and organize your games so you can launch them graphically. Figure 23-6 shows
an example of the TransGaming Cedega window.
FIGURE 23-6
Use the Cedega window to launch Windows games in Linux.
Features in the new Cedega GUI window include a new look-and-feel and tools for individually
configuring how each game runs under Cedega. (If a game won??™t run from the GUI, try launching
it from a Terminal window.)
To get binary copies (ones that are already compiled to run) of Cedega, you need to subscribe to
TransGaming. For details on how to become a ???TransGamer,??? click the Sign Up Today link on the
TransGaming home page (www.


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