The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim Guide

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Skyrim is 5th series of the epic saga known as The Elder Scrolls. Famous for the first person shooter and open-world view, Skyrim continues the Role Playing genre retaining all the favorite aspects of Morrowind and Oblivion while introducing a bunch of new features.

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New classes, new guilds, new civilizations, new state-of-the-art graphics and...
wait for it...
Dragons!

Follow my step-by-step guide on installing, configuring and optimizing Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim in Linux with PlayOnLinux.

Note: This guide applies to the Steam version of Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim

Tips & Specs:

Try SteamPlay before using this guide as Valve now uses a fork of Wine called Proton and should run most Windows games.


To learn more about PlayOnLinux and Wine configuration, see the online manual: PlayOnLinux Explained

Mint 17 64-bit
PlayOnLinux: 4.2.8
Wine: 1.7.49-staging

Wine Installation

Note: Wine versions older than 2.0.2 and 2.12-staging no longer work with Steam.


Click Tools
Select "Manage Wine Versions"
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Look for the Wine Version: 1.7.49-staging

Select it
Click the arrow pointing to the right
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Click Next

Downloading Wine
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Extracting

Downloading Gecko
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Installed
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Wine 1.7.49-staging is installed and you can close this window

PlayOnLinux Setup

Launch PlayOnLinux
Click Install
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Click "Install a non-listed program"
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Click Next

Select "Install a program in a new virtual drive"
Click Next
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Name your virtual drive: skyrim
Click Next
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Check all three options:
  • Use another version of Wine
  • Configure Wine
  • Install some libraries
Click Next
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Select Wine 1.7.49-staging
Click Next
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Select "32 bits windows installation"
Click Next
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Wine Configuration

Applications Tab
Windows Version: Windows 7
Click Apply
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Graphics Tab
Click "Automatically capture the mouse in full-screen windows"
Check "Emulate a virtual desktop"
Desktop size: 1024x768
Click OK
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PlayOnLinux Packages (Libraries, Components, DLL's)

Check the following:
  • POL_Install_corefonts
  • POL_Install_d3dx10
  • POL_Install_d3dx9
  • POL_Install_tahoma
  • POL_Install_vcrun2008
  • POL_Install_xact
Click Next
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Note: All packages will automatically download and install

Click Browse

Navigate to your desktop
Select "SteamSetup.exe"
Click Open
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Click Next
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Click Next
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Check "I accept the license..."
Click Next
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Select Language
Click Next
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Click Install
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Click Finish
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Updating...
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dwrite isn't enabled yet, so there won't be any fonts
Click The "X" and close Steam
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PlayOnLinux Shortcut

Select "Steam.exe"
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Name your shortcut: Skyrim
Click Next
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Select "I don't want to make another shortcut"
Click Next
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PlayOnLinux Configure

Back to PlayOnLinux
Select Skyrim
Click Configure
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General Tab
Wine version: 1.7.49-staging
Arguments: -no-dwrite -no-cef-sandbox
This fixes the missing font and store problem
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Note: -no-dwrite will allow the fonts in Steam

Display Tab
Video memory size: Enter the amount of memory your video card/chip uses
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Launching Skyrim

Select Skyrim
Click Run
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Note: Click Debug to see errors and bugs

Login to Steam
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Select Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim
Click Install
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Click Next
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Skyrim is about 6 Gigs
When its finish downloading...
Click Finish
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Click Play
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Detecting Video Hardware
Click OK
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Optimization

Click Options
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Graphics Adapter and Resolution
Adjust:
  • Graphics Adapter
  • Aspect Ratio
  • Resolution
  • Antialiasing
  • Anisotropic Filtering
  • Detail
  • Windowed
Click Ok
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Advanced Detail
Adjust:
  • Texture Quality
  • Radial Blur Quality
  • Shadow Detail
  • Decal Quantity
  • FXAA
  • Water Reflections
Click Close
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Advanced View Distance
Adjust:
  • Object Fade
  • Actor Fade
  • Grass Fade
  • Specularity Fade
  • Light Fade
  • Item Fade
  • Distand Object Detail
  • Object Detail Fade
Click Close
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Click Play
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Rule of Thumb
High settings = More detail, lower frame rates
Low settings = Less detail, higher frame rates

Conclusion:
Skyrim ran beautifully on my GeForce 550 Ti with everything set on High or Ultra. Wine 1.7.49-staging does a great job and I didn't have too many issue:
Tree animation was not smooth and the shadows moved irregularly
Can not see underwater (underwater view can be disabled in the .ini files)

Screenshots:
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Last edited:
For some reason when i open the game and go to load my save it gets stuck in the loading screen even when the game starts i can hear the sound but it shows me the loading screen
 
Did you ad/remove any mods recently?
I noticed that when I remove a mod, I get a warning that there will be missing content.
Maybe the save game is corrupted. This happens in Windows as well. I actually backup my saves to my Google Drive, just to be safe. 100+ hours in a game isn't worth loosing.
 
Did you ad/remove any mods recently?
I noticed that when I remove a mod, I get a warning that there will be missing content.
Maybe the save game is corrupted. This happens in Windows as well. I actually backup my saves to my Google Drive, just to be safe. 100+ hours in a game isn't worth loosing.
No i have not added/removed a mod i try to go to my save but i cant i even made a new game just to see if that works but the same thing happens again its just stuck in the loading screen but i can hear the game.
 
hat is definitely strange. I never had that problem any time I tested Skyrim.
Did you follow this guide?
You may want to try a newer version of Wine like 1.9.11-staging
Or try re-installing the game again.
 
Hello

Having a problem where every single time I exit the game via "quit to desktop" it freezes and I'm forced to hard shutdown.

Help would be appreciated.
 
Hi, Welcome to the forum. Many games refuse to close "gracefully"
There are a few steps you can try instead of forcing a shutdown of Linux.

PlayOnLinux:
  1. Alt+Tab
  2. Go to Desktop
  3. Go to PlayOnLinux Configure
  4. Select shortcut (left side)
  5. Wine Tab
  6. Kill Processes
Terminal:
  1. Alt+Tab
  2. Go to Desktop
  3. Open Terminal
  4. type: ps -g username
  5. Look for name of game .exe
  6. type: killall nameofgame.exe
System Monitor
  1. Alt+Tab
  2. Go to Desktop
  3. Launch System Monitor
  4. Find game exe
  5. Right-click
  6. Kill Process
Sometimes Alt+Tab won't work
You can also try changing to another desktop with Ctrl+arrow-keys
 
I've tried multiple different guides on installing skyrim through PlayOnLinux and I feel my directories are a mess now regarding wine installations/virtualdrives etc. Is there anyway to start from scratch. My main problem is the really low fps outdoors with an rx 480 and i5 3470. Particularly in this guide where it says to navigate to desktop and select SeamSetup.exe, this does not appear in my desktop but I presume it is located somewhere in the .Playonlinux/ directory but I am confused as I have tried multiple times and my have ended up with duplicate files within this directory. Basically is there a way to uninstall Playonlinux and wine (even the install components such as xact/d3d10 etc), is it just a matter of sudo apt-get purge playonlinux or will there be leftovers? SOrry for the long winded question.
 
Welcome to the forum Conor.
Yes you can definitely start over with a new Virtual Drive.
Just go to Configure, select the virtual drive (left side) and click Remove.
I recommend leaving the "default" one, but you can remove the other Skyrim Virtual Drives. This way, you can start over with a brand new one. Also, when you download the Windows Steam installer, just save it to your Desktop. If its not there, then its probably in your Downloads folder. That is normally a default for internet browsers like Chrome or Firefox.

Sounds like you previously got it working, but it runs too slow. I recommend checking your AMD drivers. Try installing the proprietary drivers or just use the open-source drivers. I've heard AMD drivers do not perform so great...

You can also, mess with the game video settings. Crank down the resolution or distance settings to improve performance.
 
Welcome to the forum Conor.
Yes you can definitely start over with a new Virtual Drive.
Just go to Configure, select the virtual drive (left side) and click Remove.
I recommend leaving the "default" one, but you can remove the other Skyrim Virtual Drives. This way, you can start over with a brand new one. Also, when you download the Windows Steam installer, just save it to your Desktop. If its not there, then its probably in your Downloads folder. That is normally a default for internet browsers like Chrome or Firefox.

Sounds like you previously got it working, but it runs too slow. I recommend checking your AMD drivers. Try installing the proprietary drivers or just use the open-source drivers. I've heard AMD drivers do not perform so great...

You can also, mess with the game video settings. Crank down the resolution or distance settings to improve performance.

Oh I presumed you download steam through PlayOnLinux, my bad. When I got to this stage I exited the installer and proceeded to install steam through PlayOnLinux and currently installing skyrim through that or would you recommend starting over and installing steam separately from PlayOnLinux. As for drivers I am using amdgpu as the pro version is not available on ubuntu 16.10
 
Just an update, I got it installed using your guide successfully. However I have a few issues, steam workshop/store does not open and when I launch into skyrim the keyboard does not work. Still using amdgpu drivers, funny enough I did not install any drivers for this card so it seems the card came with this driver pre-installed. Any ideas on how to fix these issues?
 
They keyboard issue... i'm not sure. Haven't heard of that one before. Try using a newer version of Wine. You can easily download it from Tools - Wine Manager.
Then go to Configure - Select skyrim - General Tab - Downarrow to select Wine

The store can be fixed by going to Configure - Select Skyrim shortcut (left side) - Enter this in Arguments: -no-dwrite -no-cef-sandbox
 
Ok the keyboard and store issue fixed when I selected windows xp, I already had those arguments setup and it was not working prior and as regards the keyboard issues its apparently suppose to do with running through a virtual machine. With everything working the fps is below 20 on vanilla skyrim sadly. Do you think this is purely video card driver related issues. By doing a google search on rx 480 drivers ubuntu 16.10, there is literally no info on a stable driver for this version. Do you think it is just a matter of waiting until they release official stable drivers for ubuntu 16.10?
 
You wrote "virtual machine" did you mean "virtual drive"?
Just making sure....

I'm not versed in AMD drivers. I have one computer with an older AMD card and the drivers really suck. I have a touchscreen with AMD and it runs ok with open-source drivers. Thats about all I know.
All of my other machines and GeForce video cards and they run GREAT!

I'm guessing this is a laptop right?
All you can do is wait for some stable drivers, or try some of the beta one's... at your own risk of course. Sometimes things can break and its hard to bring your system back.
 
But I assumed with using wine there is some method of virtualization being used here as the window that appears when running skyrim is essentially a windows environment or maybe that is purely because of the virtual drive. This is a desktop with an i5 3470 and RX 480 and you would assume that you would achieve more than 20fps from a relatively old game. As you say I should probably wait until official drivers are released, there is a blog on setting up "amdgpu-pro" on 16.10 but I think it involves tweaks on the kernel side but I am going of avoid that as I only pernamentally switched to Linux 2 months ago. Note that when I check my driver version it states I am running "amdgpu" not the pro version. It seems that these amdgpu/pro open source drivers are in their early development stages as I believe they are transitioning from fglrx to these open source drivers. Thanks for the replies but I guess there is not much troubleshooting we can do if its primarily driver related.
 
Good point!
The benefit of using Wine is that it is "not" emulation or virtualization. From what I've read, its actually a sandbox environment that packages all the basic windows dependencies in order to run Windows programs. It still uses all the native drivers and hardware connectivity through Linux. It does require Wineserver running in the background so that may eat-up some CPU cycles, but its minimal.

I'm glad you have a Desktop... this is good news. Unfortunately even though you have a sweet card... drivers can still kill your performance. That card should handle any modern game!

I suggest doing some research on your card and drivers. You might find some success! Worst case scenario is the driver messes things up and you have to re-install Linux again. I'll mess around with Mint 18 and my old AMD card drivers. I'll see how easy/hard it is to install drivers through a PPA
 
Another thing that might be causing the issue is that when I go into the skyrim options it doesn't detect my rx 480 instead it assumes I am running an ATI HD 2900 XT. When I think about it this may be the real issue of the low fps, is there any workarounds to get wine to detect my graphics card properly?
 
I've had similar problems with Crysis games and my video cards.
I just remembered there is a special Wine version just for AMD cards: Wine Gallium Nine

I've read there are some huge performance boosts with this and AMD cards. Not sure if you need to be using open-source or proprietary drivers...
In fact, PlayOnLinux should already have some of these Gallium Nine Staging versions in the Wine Manager.
 
AMD drivers have Linux issues that's why I always try to get an NVIDIA card since their driver work well with Linux.:)
 
I totally agree, but as you know... some gamers come from Windows to Linux and already have a gaming machine with a decent AMD card. The frustrating drivers is a complete turn-off and pushes them away.
I would definitely prefer AMD to optimize their drivers instead, but I know that a whole $$ battle. It is happening, but slowly...
 
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