Because of my quest to play “collector” in World of Warcraft (and I know this has been a month of World of Warcraft; my apologies…I get tunnel vision sometimes) I have been on a bit of an adventure. Playing on my laptop with its older graphics processor, a unified architecture Ryzen 7/Vega 3 (and its currently limited RAM) causes some issues. I was never able to get WoW retail running. Under a Wine install I would experience random shutdowns during the install. About one out of forty times the Battle.net install would complete, but then Battle.net would not operate fully. I couldn’t install any Battle.net game, because it kept telling me I was “offline.” Don’t go checking for solutions to that problem explicitly, by the way; you will find a lot of people telling you “well, *of course* you can’t install…*you’re offline*. Go online and then it will work.” You can just picture your favorite “head smacking/are you stupid” reaction gif now. I did read a few references that sometime in Summer 2025 Blizzard changed “something” that has disabled or at least greatly hampered Linux installs. To be sure the only success stories I found predated this past summer. But given my available hardware, I would not be surprised if it was possible.
There are, at this point, *many* recommendations to install World of Warcraft through Steam. This isn’t 100% straightforward; by the traditional instructions you have to run the Battle.net installer, cancel it out when it asks to log-in (something that is part of the Wine instructions as well), then change the configuration to point to the just-installed Battle.net rather than the installer, which will now run under Steam’s Wine overlay Proton, and successfully install World of Warcraft. Here’s the first thing, though: after the Battle.net install completed, I couldn’t ever find where it installed. *Every other game* I ever installed through Steam *and ran,* which may be the important part, is in my Steam archive folder. What *did* work is doing the Wine install (which can fail often, remember) then adding *that* installed Battle.net to Steam. This is when I hit the second issue: World of Warcraft would only install to the internal hard drive, the one that’s only 256 gigabytes and about 2/3 full. I *should* be able to change to any of my external drives, but it couldn’t see them. I’m sure this has something to do with pretending to install through Windows, and there is probably a legitimate explanation…but I don’t currently know what it is. Continue reading 〉〉 “When Did World of Warcraft Jump the Shark? or, A Tale Too Big For Azeroth”
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