welcome to the forums Chameleon! that was a very pragmatic and almost philosophical post about the situation. wasn't this sort of the same situation with Macs a few years ago and now you can actually get some decent gaming in on them. I ran linux for awhile in a server /performance capacity and was amazed with the results but you have to be a stoic pioneer if you want to live there for a long time, something I wasn't and definitly not able to convince those I was living with to switch either. glad you found a viable solution with WINE and able to resuscitate some other titles too!
Thanks for the welcome...
That's the situation from my perspective as a long-time user and proponent of Linux on the Desktop/Workstation.
I was first exposed to Linux in 1995 by a friend. He was running a dial-up BBS with a small modem pool on Slackware in a multi-tasking color command-line environment. I was slightly intrigued, but at the time Windows 95 was in the spotlight and Microsoft held my attention for a few years due to the more modern-appearing GUI environment and the vast number of games and applications.
Eventually I started to tire of the upgrade treadmill and worse yet the stain of guilt on my conscious regarding the dichotomous cultures of commercialism and piracy permeating the Windows user communities. The fatal blow to my view of Microsoft and Windows was the inevitability of having to reinstall Windows (Win2K at the time) AGAIN after only 9 months use because it shit all over itself and some critical system libraries had become corrupt.
I was so MAD!
Fortunately I had been playing with some modern Linux distributions complete with GUI desktop environments. Although I was only occasionally poking at it, trying to wrap my head around the differences, I could see that the pace of innovation and development methodologies surrounding Linux were far superior. I also really identified with the Open Source & Free Software Foundation's idealism and concepts of preserving rights rather than stripping them away... It was so... refreshing.
So I decided to investigate what it would take to convert to running Linux as my primary OS, keeping a small Windows partition only for some games I was hopelessly addicted to.
I found that the distributions included many applications to accomplish the majority of what I needed to do with my computer, other than premium games. Some of the applications were rather mature and others were less mature, but stable enough to use. This was acceptable because even if an application died, it did not take down Linux with it, unlike what I was used to with Windows BSODs.
And I haven't looked back. In fact, I can't even remember when I last booted Windows on my PC... I actually deleted the partition on my Tablet PC to make room for 15 hours digital video I recorded of my recent 2,865 mile motorcycle trip to Death Valley with my wife. Those are the only computers I own with Windows on them. She switched to Linux long before me since she didn't play much games!
Finally, the one area I am still "stuck" with Windows is my work... I'm a Software Test Automation Specialist by day and freelance PC Technician by evenings and weekends. The majority of work in these fields is Windows-based, no doubt in part because I live and work very near Microsoft's headquarters, and partly because Windows software and commodity PCs break all the time...
I occasionally monitor the local job openings and hold out hope that one day I'll be able to derive sufficient and significant income to sustain my household by working directly with 100% Linux and Open Source technologies...
One fine day.