![]() ![]() ![]() wine is its own prefix, and installing multiple programs into that may work just fine. You can have as many virtualized Windows environments as you wish, each one called a prefix (though the WINE documentation also sometimes refers to them as bottles… get it, WINE comes in a bottle… har har). wine, especially if you are using a program like Lutris or PlayOnLinux to manage them. Programs installed with WINE might be in other places than. I haven’t found Catfish to be as powerful as Kfind, though, so if you can install Kfind in Mint without pulling in a trillion dependencies, it might be good to try them both, if you’re looking for that kind of thing. The result field is interactive, so you can go right from there to launching the file, opening its folder, deleting it, or whatever else you wish.Īnother choice is Catfish, which uses the GTK+ (GNOME) toolkit for its UI, so it’s more “native” looking in Cinnamon and the other Mint desktops (all of which also use GTK+). It’s a fully graphical search tool that’s part of the KDE Plasma desktop (though I do not remember if it was installed by default or not), though it might also work for non-Plasma desktops, in the same manner that I use a number of GNOME tools in Plasma. I use Kfind as my go-to file search tool. home/username/.wine/drive_c/Program Files Most of my games in Windows were stored in Program Files so you can look first in: ![]() home/username/.var/app//data/openttd/saveįor Windows games running in Wine you start in the. home/username/snap/freeorion/common/saveįlatpak and Wine games are a bit harder to find unless you have your home folder set to “show hidden files”. The whereis for Freeorion only leads to the technical info for the game not the saves.įinding the Freeorion save files was easy because a snap folder was put into my /home/username folder. deb game saves but Aisleriot Solitaire doesn’t save games. The usr/share may be the save location for the. You can use the “whereis” command in the terminal to find game folders.Īisleriot: /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/aisleriot /usr/share/aisleriot Deleting saves in-game is slow and I find it easier to go to the save folder and delete them as a group. Saved games are more important to find because they can accumulate quickly and make in-game navigation a pain. Knowing where they are stored makes it easier to view and edit (or delete) them later. Screenshots are a fun way to record interesting moments in games. Mint comes with the Gnome Screenshot tool and the default save location is your home/username/pictures folder. I am using Linux Mint 19.3 – a debian/ubuntu distribution and other flavours of Linux might have different save paths. I thought I would share what I found out. As I install more games on my computer I am finding it important to know where they store screenshots and saved games. ![]()
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