this post was submitted on 26 Nov 2025
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Every distro has supported 64-bit programs for the last decade. Why aren't you able to run 64-bit programs?
Correct, so why does steam on linux still run as a 32 bit app and require 32 bit libraries to run games.
steam itself is moving towards 64-bit on linux on well, but fact is that most games are 32-bit and linux doesn't have the same compatibility guarantees as windows since you can just recompile software to run on new systems. you can't do that with old games, so you need multilib.
I believe wine has a WoW64 implementation now, to allow 32 bit software to run on 64 bit wine prefixes. Which means any windows games (unless they are 16 bit) can work on 64 bit non-multi-arch system.
Linux games are the core problem. But they also have a Steam Runtime where they ship the entire runtime libraries needed to run a game for compatibility reasons... and Steam Runtime 4.0 (which just shipped and/or announced a few days ago?) is set up for only 64 bit systems.
So if the answer is:
Then the answer is just "they're getting around to it, they are only just now getting around to it for windows, and linux is a lower priority" because clearly its all possible.
So "What about linux?" is just asking if there is a timeline for the speed that things are moving in that direction.
i think the wine-wow64 thing is pretty new though, right?
Looks like it was introduced with Wine 9.0 in January of 2024
Running Steam should be fully independent of running games.
At least the client. You might still need some 32-bit libs if a game uses steamworks drm. I'm not sure how stuff like the overlay or achievements are integrated.
as long as steam is the parent process it would still matter, right?
You have misunderstood the person you replied to.
this is about steam, a proprietary program only available as a 64-bit executable