Game Compatibility
F1® 25 on Linux
F1® 25 on Linux: Works with tweaks. Proton tier: Silver. Anti-cheat: Anti-cheat broken. The base game can run on Linux, but anti-cheat-protected online modes may fail. Test the exact mode you care about before removing Windows.
Plan around: Keep a Windows, console, or cloud fallback for this title until the supported path changes. Test first: Do not attempt risky anti-cheat workarounds on your main account
Anti-cheat is unstable on Linux right now, so treat multiplayer or other protected modes as at-risk.
Decision fit
Use this page if F1® 25 affects your game library
- You play F1® 25 weekly or it is part of your friend-group routine.
- You need to compare Proton (Silver), anti-cheat (Anti-cheat broken), and desktop Linux status (Works with tweaks).
- You are deciding whether to keep Windows, a console, cloud gaming, or a dual-boot for this title.
F1® 25 is a Windows-retention risk today. Keep a supported fallback if this title matters.
- Do not attempt risky anti-cheat workarounds on your main account
- Launch from your real store or launcher account
- Check the rest of your weekly games before making a whole-library migration decision.
F1® 25 decision snapshot
The base game can run on Linux, but anti-cheat-protected online modes may fail. Test the exact mode you care about before removing Windows.
Read this together with anti-cheat and launcher behavior, not in isolation.
Anti-cheat is unstable on Linux right now, so treat multiplayer or other protected modes as at-risk.
Run this before trusting the result on your main account or main PC.
Linux Readiness
| Desktop Linux | Works with tweaks |
|---|---|
| Proton tier | Silver |
| Anti-cheat | Anti-cheat broken |
| Best method | The base game can run on Linux, but anti-cheat-protected online modes may fail. Test the exact mode you care about before removing Windows. |
Keep Windows if: Keep a Windows, console, or cloud fallback for this title until the supported path changes.
How to judge F1® 25 on Linux
F1® 25 currently shows Proton silver, anti-cheat broken, and desktop Linux works with tweaks. The base game can run on Linux, but anti-cheat-protected online modes may fail. Test the exact mode you care about before removing Windows. Treat the current record as more reliable than old launch anecdotes.
Anti-cheat is unstable on Linux right now, so treat multiplayer or other protected modes as at-risk. If this is a must-play title, keep a supported fallback on Windows, console, or cloud until the publisher-supported path changes.
- Read the current signal together: Proton silver, anti-cheat broken, desktop Linux works with tweaks.
- Test the exact launcher, account, input, saves, and online mode you actually use.
- Keep a supported fallback for ranked, social, or money-linked play.
What F1® 25 decides for a Linux gamer
F1® 25 should be evaluated as part of the user’s real library, not as an abstract Proton example. The current page labels it as Works with tweaks, with Proton tier Silver and anti-cheat status Anti-cheat broken. Those three signals together matter more than any single rating because games fail through different layers.
If F1® 25 is a daily or multiplayer title, it can decide whether Linux becomes the main gaming OS or only a secondary environment. The migration decision should be based on actual launch, account, online, save, controller, and performance testing on your own hardware.
Proton and launcher expectations
For F1® 25, Proton is part of the decision. Start with the default Proton version, then test Proton Experimental or GE-Proton only when current reports suggest a benefit. Record the working version and launch options so the setup can be rebuilt after a driver, kernel, or game update.
Launcher behavior matters. Steam, Epic, EA, Ubisoft, Battle.net, and custom launchers can each introduce separate login, overlay, update, DLC, or cloud-save problems. A game is not fully ready until the launcher path is stable too.
Anti-cheat and account safety
The anti-cheat label for F1® 25 is Anti-cheat broken. Treat this as a hard warning. If online play is blocked or publisher-denied, do not rely on unsupported workarounds for a main account.
For competitive games, the safest rule is simple: check anti-cheat status before launch, avoid unsupported setups, and keep Windows, console, or cloud gaming available for any title where the publisher has not enabled Linux support. Account safety is more important than proving that a workaround can boot the menu.
Hands-on test plan
A useful F1® 25 test includes single-player launch if available, multiplayer or online services, controller or keyboard/mouse input, graphics settings, fullscreen and display scaling, audio devices, cloud saves, DLC, mods, overlays, and a normal update cycle. Do not stop after the title screen.
F1® 25 belongs in the test-first group. If it works, save the exact Proton version, launch options, graphics driver, and desktop session so you can reproduce the setup later.
How it changes the full migration plan
If F1® 25 is one of your main games, keep Windows, console, or cloud gaming in the plan. Linux can still be useful for work and other games, but this title should not be treated as solved.
The best gaming migration is not ideological. It is a library-by-library decision. Move the games that work, keep a fallback for the games that do not, and avoid buying new hardware or deleting Windows until the must-play titles are understood.
Migration decision for F1® 25
Switch decision
Works with tweaks
F1® 25 should be treated as a Windows-retention title. Keep your Windows install available if this is one of your main games.
Compatibility signal
Proton: Silver
F1® 25 depends on Proton quality. Try the default Proton first, then Proton Experimental or GE-Proton only if reports suggest it.
Multiplayer risk
Anti-cheat broken
Anti-cheat or publisher policy is the likely hard blocker. Keep Windows, console, or cloud streaming available.
Pre-switch test checklist
Game pages are decision aids, not a substitute for testing on your own account and hardware. Before you make Linux your only gaming OS, run this checklist for F1® 25.
- Do not attempt risky anti-cheat workarounds on your main account
- Launch from your real store or launcher account
- Test multiplayer or online services if the game uses them
- Check controller input, graphics settings, frame pacing, and fullscreen behavior
- Verify cloud saves, mods, launch options, DLC, and overlays
- Record the exact Proton version and launch options that worked so you can reproduce the setup after updates.
When to keep Windows
Keep a Windows dual-boot, separate Windows PC, console, or cloud gaming path if F1® 25 is one of your daily titles and this page shows broken anti-cheat, publisher denial, borked Proton status, or unverified multiplayer behavior.
If the page shows a working path, still test updates over time. Proton, launchers, kernel versions, GPU drivers, and anti-cheat decisions can change after a game update.
FAQ
Can I play F1® 25 on Linux?
F1® 25 is "Works with tweaks" on desktop Linux (Proton tier: silver). The base game can run on Linux, but anti-cheat-protected online modes may fail. Test the exact mode you care about before removing Windows.
What is the anti-cheat status for F1® 25 on Linux?
F1® 25: anti-cheat broken. Anti-cheat is unstable on Linux right now, so treat multiplayer or other protected modes as at-risk.
Can I remove Windows if F1® 25 is important to me?
F1® 25 should be treated as a Windows-retention title. Keep your Windows install available if this is one of your main games.
What should I test before switching this game to Linux?
Test launch, account login, multiplayer, controller input, graphics settings, save sync, mods, and any anti-cheat warnings before treating F1® 25 as safe on your main PC.
Related games to check next
These titles share similar Proton, anti-cheat, Steam Deck, or desktop Linux signals. Check them before making a whole-library migration decision.
Battlefield™ 1
The base game can run on Linux, but anti-cheat-protected online modes may fail. Test the exact mode you care about before removing Windows.
Battlefield™ V
The base game can run on Linux, but anti-cheat-protected online modes may fail. Test the exact mode you care about before removing Windows.
Escape from Tarkov
The base game can run on Linux, but anti-cheat-protected online modes may fail. Test the exact mode you care about before removing Windows.
SCUM
The base game can run on Linux, but anti-cheat-protected online modes may fail. Test the exact mode you care about before removing Windows.
Arena Breakout: Infinite
The base game can run on Linux, but anti-cheat-protected online modes may fail. Test the exact mode you care about before removing Windows.
Warhammer 40,000: Space Marine 2
The core Proton path looks workable, but anti-cheat-protected online behavior can still break. Test the exact modes you care about before removing Windows.