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FIX: Sims 2 custom videos not showing (black screen) ā Linux Mint / Lutris
ok I need to document this because Iāve just fixed something that refused to work on the SAME machine under Windows 11 š
Sims 2 custom videos (black screen / not showing) on Linux Mint ā FIX
I was having the classic issue:
custom AVIs not showing on computer screens / TVs
black screen or nothing happens
files work fine in VLC so it makes no sense
this is NOT a mod issue. itās a codec problem.
whatās actually wrong
Sims 2 uses an old video system (DirectShow + VP6 codec)
Linux doesnāt include that properly in Wine by default, so the game literally canāt read the video even though the file exists.
how I fixed it (Lutris method)
open Lutris
select The Sims 2 in your library
at the bottom of the window, next to the Play button, click the small arrow (ā²)
click Winetricks
youāll get a window asking what to do:
š choose āSelect the default wineprefixā ā OK
next screen: š choose āInstall a Windows DLL or componentā
install these:
quartz
wmp9
lavfilters
let everything install, close Winetricks, then launch the game
result
custom computer screen videos ā WORKING
custom TV videos ā WORKING
no black screens anymore
important note
if you copied your Sims 2 install from another OS before, donāt overwrite the VP6 folders inside the game files. those are OS-specific and can break video playback.
honestly???
this worked better on Linux Mint than it EVER did on my Windows 11 setup š
if your Sims 2 videos are broken and youāre on Linux, try this before doing anything else.
Healing Sims 2 with Linux (part 2)
This is a follow-up for my Linux saga. Basically, I tried Linux and it runs perfectly.
Let's start with theory.
DON'T BOTHER TO DO IT IF YOU DON'T CONSIDER YOURSELF TECH-SAVVY. IF YOU'RE EVEN SLIGHTLY UNSURE IN YOUR ACTIONS AFTER READING TUTORIALS, ASK SOMEBODY WITH A COMPUTER WHIZ PERSONALITY TRAIT TO HELP YOU WITH LINUX. TS2 installation afterwards is easier in a way, you probably wouldn't burn your computer.
Note that to expect any results, you need to have a decent PC. Mine is i5, 16gb RAM, Geforce 1650 4 gb. Not cutting-edge, but more that enough for abusing the hell out of TS2. IDK but your 10-year-old working laptop may still fold and do some crashing, because it has lower limits. But expect it to be less.
Step 1: Watch Tea Addict on Youtube
Watch it fully, then scan this post and then proceed to actually doing things.
Huge credit for Tea Addict for popularizing the method. She's the one to film a huge tutorial that basically explains how to successfully move to Linux. Open it and watch before you do anything, then see my notes for some occurred changes, corrections and additions. I want to add some details to her video that haven't been mentioned but are important.
Join Tea Addict's Discord for more support and discussion
Starting with Linux. BACKUP YOUR WINDOWS!
p.s: if you canāt successfully google something i tell to google, better ask techy person to help with the whole thing. potentially just let them handle the whole installation.
1. Start by simply googling how Linux works. It would be a pain to implement all the lore here. Basically, you'd want to be a bit tech-savvy for installation and up until you launch your Sims 2 and everything works perfectly with your ton of CC and high settings. The biggest difference is that you'll have to do many things through Terminal. You'll get how it works after a few times you'll be ordered to use it by tutorials.
2. Understand what you're downloading Linux for. It has a lot of user-friendly distros that are great for everyday use. I downloaded Linux for playing TS2, but now I browse the Internet, watch movies and keep my notes and writings here too. Here's an article that explains main pros of using Linux. I like it for smoothness, fastness and a lack of things I don't need.
3. If you're unsure what distro to get, get Mint Cinnamon. Tea Addict uses it, many TS2 users use it. Most importantly, it is widely popular elsewhere. You need it to be popular to get the best support and google results. Pop!_OS is also good for gaming, but I recommend Mint. When/if you become a Linux enthusiast, you may choose something else to try. DO NOT DOWNLOAD ARCH!
4. Don't be radical and uninstall Windows. Make a double boot. Better to buy a standalone SSD for that, if you're not a pro, don't partition your existing drive, even if you have space for that.
5. Dedicate enough space. You would want enough for your distro + Lutris + TS2 installation + your Downloads folder which WILL expand a lot because you won't be afraid to stress your game anymore + all TS2 utilities + needed packages and utilities for Linux. You will probably get the taste and want to try some other games and tasks on your new OS, so be resourceful.
5. When installing from a USB boot, you may run into "Can't proceed to install because RST is on". The support link provided wouldn't be helpful for inexperienced users. The process is scary and you need to get into your BIOS to change storage mode from RST to AHCI (don't do this if there's no error). If there's no setting for that, google how to turn on Advanced mode in BIOS for your PC manufacturer. Better to get personalized support. I hate AI but even I had to use Deepseek for help. If you know what to do, following this link beforehand will save you from losing your Windows install in process.
6. When in Windows, don't touch your partition with Linux with a 10 feet pole. I simply renamed my Linux drive in Explorer from "New Drive" to "Mint" and my Mint install wiped away, had to reinstall completely.
7. If you have Nvidia GPU, install their driver through Driver manager. For TS2 many suggest version 550, but you can also install recommended. Some users say they had to try different ones before they got great results.
8. Test your audio. If there's none, you have to install PulseAudio/Pipewire. Here's a fix. If it's still silent, I suggest clicking on sound icon near the clock, then on Sound setting, and then mess around with output devices.
9. Install a system-wide VPN if your country's network is regulated in any way. I can't access the majority of international servers in my country, so without VPN I have trouble installing packages from terminal or Package Manager.
SETTING UP TS2
1. Don't mess with your Windows TS2 installation yet, let it live before you check that everything flies on Linux. You can't access Linux files from Windows, but you absolutely can access and copy Windows files from Linux. So no cloud storage of flash drive necessary for moving. But yeah you should've done a whole Windows 11 and files backup, remember that?
2. Most importantly, OSAB's Starter Pack is dead. You'll need to google "Sims 2 Magipack" and find a carrd with a magnet link. It features everything from Starter Pack and posesses the usual Ultimate Collection file structure. RPC works, 4gb patch applied. It also provides installed CEP and Scriptorium, if I understand it correctly. GRM install is optional. Inside there are bonus items. In Tea Addict's video there's a part where she moves files from install to install. Make sure you don't duplicate preorder bonuses and Store content and move CEP files correctly.
3. IDK if Magipack includes it, so make sure to replace your Graphic Rules file with a Legacy Collection one. Don't tweak anything else in GRM. The whole "recognizing new graphic cards" talk is unnecessary.
4. When installing TS2 from .exe on Lutris, make sure installer preset is either Windows 10 or Windows 7 64-bit. Don't choose 32-bit because the game is. Lutris handles it.
5. In Lutris, right-click on your installed game, then Settings> Game Configuration (or Settings? IDK I have another language) . Make sure your executable is .../Sims2UC/drive_c/MagiPacks/The Sims 2/Fun with Pets/SP9/TSBin/Sims2RPC.exe (don't copy, just find that file in your system). Lutris can mess it up sometimes. Try to run the game to see if it works normally and loads the neighbourhoods.
6. Now you can transfer your EA Games folder with saves and mods.
7. In the same window from step 5, to go System Configuration > Display > GPU. Choose your dedicated GPU like Nvidia or AMD. Or there will be no magic effect (the Pink will return).
8. If that leaves you with game simply not running, then in the same old window go to Runner Settings > Wine version. Change it to ge-proton. Now everything should work with no limitations and crashes! Your game will fully work out your powerful GPU. Watch out for overheating!
9. RPC settings work through "Launch EXE inside Wine prefix", just install whatever they ask on the first launch. Same with Bodyshop.
10. When changing resolution in-game to make my UI bigger, borderless window didn't scale to monitor but became smaller. My easiest but dumbest method is lowering the whole OC resolution to 1600x900 (or whatever suits you). It's not bothering me visually, but UI isn't tiny anymore.
11. SimPE install is a little tricky. Here's the instruction (top comment). If winetricks don't open, go to System Options in Lutris, check "Disable Lutris Runtime", restart the app. Uncheck when you're done with tutorial, before launching any program. For me, SimPE required not only dotnet40, but a latest (9th?) .NET runtime from the same list.
12. In her video, Tea Addict recommends installing a particular Lutris version from the Package Manager, citing that thereās some compatibility benefits. I couldnāt install it (yaaaas authoritarian regime web isolation!!!) and downloaded a .deb file from official Lutris site. Was worrying some of my problems were connected to that. However, thereās no difference ā TeaA herself updated that she moved to .deb version. Donāt stress too much about Lutris until itās up to date.
That's all, I think! Note that with Linux, everything is different for everyone. But I've decided to list all the caveats and problems I've run into, so you don't have to rummage through the whole Internet for them!
Talkin about Linux in 2025
Bazzite laptop (Timaeus)
CachyOS desktop (Maruki)
I swear to gd it feels like all my games run better on Linux through the Proton compatibility layer than native on Windows
ON TOP OF ALL THIS: I have clocked around 35 hours in Hades 2. I have played at least 30 of those hours on my Odin 2 Portal, which is an android device by using an app that emulates Linux and then the Proton layer and it runs at a rock solid 60FPS. Valve is making Windows unnecessary for gaming across PC and mobile. That's fucking batshit.
Sleep Mode finally works again on both my devices. I haven't used Sleep Mode since Win11 happened bc it broke it on both my machines. Linux fixed it.
CachyOS has a weird glitch where if it just booted or came out of sleep, it doesn't register my keyboard unless I unplug-replug. I have to find a fix.
Before I flipped to Linux, I had used Rainmeter, Windhawk, Startallback, and other programs to basically hack the Windows desktop environment to do what I wanted, and it was still lovely but broken twice a month bc if any one plugin needed an update, it'd all fail. Linux, on the other hand, just has Desktop Environments. You can have multiple installed at a time and you choose when you log-in which you want. I really like KDE Plasma but maybe you'd prefer GNOME. A lot of people like Cinnamon for how it feels like classic Windows but with a lot of themeing options. There's also Pantheon and LXQT for lightweight systems or Cosmic (which is PopOS's branch of GNOME I believe, VERY pretty but still needs some work IMO) or Budgie or Deepin
Lemme put it like this, I searched for a quick list of major desktop environments to remind myself of a few and one commenter I saw was complaining how much they wanted to like GNOME but resented having to install an extension just to have more docks. Bro is complaining about something Windows people have to hack into their UX in the first place.
I really like the immutable system concept of CachyOS/Arch Linux/Bazzite, especially for gaming.
Lemme expand on that because I first balked at it so hard because it reminded me of Apple's approach to software. Longtime listeners know I fucking hate Apple with a fire of a 1000 suns. One of my many reasons is the way MacOS and iOS feel like the rental car of devices. Maybe it looks shiny but your options for customization are limited and you are not supposed to have control over the user experience (UX).
I've looked into rooting an iPad to get control of it. I say this as someone who owns more jailbroken devices than not; it's difficult and I'm unsure the final result is even worth it. And obviously it voids the warranty and can result in repercussions from Apple, which is fucked if you have purchased shit from them.
But anyway. An Immutable Linux system is (to my current understanding) not the Apple Walled Garden but a house with a locked door that you have the key to. All of the parts of a computer that make it functional and work, the "core" that keeps it running are in that locked room.
When you install a program or a video game, you are not putting it in the locked room. Instead, this metaphorical house makes a new room and installs the thing there. And in there is a copy of everything the program needs to run.
You know how when you install a program on Windows, it puts some files in the C drive but it puts the settings in the Documents and then it puts its configuration files in AppData and it probably also installs some dependencies and flips a few things in the Registry.
With an Immutable System like Bazzite or Arch, no it doesn't. Instead, it gets it's own room and all that shit goes into that room. It doesn't mess with the locked room at all.
This means all changes to the computer are isolated to a container and will not fuck up the OS itself. If the OS gets fucked up, it's probably the user poking around in the locked room without being clear on what they need in there. You're allowed in! But should only go in if you are certain what you're doing. Hell, Arch Linux explicitly states it's intended for, "anyone with a do-it-yourself attitude who is willing to read the documentation, and solve their own problems."
There's a few oddities I don't understand. Like, if everything is in containers, how do those containers communicate? I know they do, given the minimal issues I've had, but how, yanno? Also, by design, these containers have superfluous information. Every game I install has it's OWN c_drive folder and it's own AppData folder if I want to tinker or install a mod. Does this eat up extra space on the storage device? I mean, I accept that compromise for the stability, I'm just curious.
Okay that's enough yapping. I'll wrap this up by saying if you want to try Linux, I would recommend Bazzite for gamers and for most casual users. You may also consider trying Linux Mint if you want something that's specifically geared toward former Windows users but can later be expanded to be more experimental when you're comfortable. For artists who need specific programs, the landscape is much better than 10 years ago but it'll depend on your individual needs.
We shouldnāt simplify the anti-cheat on Linux issue to just Linux not supporting anti-cheat- because thatās simply not true. Linux does support a lot of anti-cheat software, itās just that most of the time when anti-cheat is an issue, itās a deliberate choice by the developers to block Linux.
Many anti-cheats work just fine on Linux, and we need to push back against developers trying to block an entire operating system because of the mere possibility there *might* be a few extra cheaters. If you donāt want cheaters, youād have to just not release a game- but thatās unreasonable, and so it blocking other operating systems.
(And to be clear, yes, there is likely some anti-cheat that doesnāt support Linux, at least at the moment. I just want to clear up any misconceptions about Linux blanket not supporting anti-cheat)
so apex legends just blocked people from playing on linux "to combat cheating". nevermind that 99% of cheaters are on windows because most cheaters are not master hackers TTLing the mainframe to crack the chipset, but snotnosed 14 year olds who downloaded some barely functional malware. this is what not being able to install kernel-level spyware on someone's computer does to a mf
say what you want about overwatch but it has run flawlessly on linux since it came out on steam and cheaters on any OS are basically not an issue there. I'm sorry EA, but your cheater plague is nothing more than a skill issue
hey did you know there are cheaters on windows? better ban all PC players just to be sure. and hey, xbox and playstation have an unfair advantage over the switch, that's basically cheating, ban them too! and you know what? the switch is the only current console you can really jailbreak so there may be cheaters over there too.
An interesting thing about switching to Linux is that I held off for ages because I was afraid I wouldn't be able to play my games.
Instead, I'm able to play Civilization V again. I had to make one change to a .ini because modern CPUs have more threads than Civ 5 anticipated, but I found that fix in a single search for "civilization 5 linux crash". So I've got a 16-year-old game that refused to launch on my Windows 10 install running natively with the barest of tweaks. I'm dominating as the Inca on my custom extra-hilly world like it's still Obama's first term.
It had never occurred to me that while yes switching to Linux would make it more difficult to play modern competitive games with kernel level anticheat (a category of game that I don't actually play), Linux's general stability would mean backwards compatibility for at least one game that I had long since written off!
Fallout 1.5: Resurrection is a fan-made total conversion mod for Fallout 2. If you've been looking to get it running on your Steam Deck, here's a step-by-step guide to do exactly that.
Check out the guide here š
https://dadwithadeck.com/2026/04/21/how-to-install-fallout-1-5-resurrection-on-steam-deck/