I’d recommend not using an emulated DAW for real production work, but using the Reason Rack VST in a Linux native DAW that supports it is excellent. A DAW will want hardware access and wine hardware drivers don’t really exist, so for best results, try using a Linux native DAW (there are several)
A DAW will want hardware access and wine hardware drivers don’t really exist
I’ve read in the past that some DAWs like FL Studio run quite well in Wine, but I’ve never tried it myself. I agree that it’s best just to use a native Linux DAW.
I just wish Reason would make it Linux compatible. Would never return to windows, ever
Looks it could run somehow. Seems no results for current wine version…
https://appdb.winehq.org/objectManager.php?sClass=application&iId=811
Also found this comment:
I’d recommend not using an emulated DAW for real production work, but using the Reason Rack VST in a Linux native DAW that supports it is excellent. A DAW will want hardware access and wine hardware drivers don’t really exist, so for best results, try using a Linux native DAW (there are several)
Source: https://appdb.winehq.org/objectManager.php?sClass=version&iId=40891
I’ve read in the past that some DAWs like FL Studio run quite well in Wine, but I’ve never tried it myself. I agree that it’s best just to use a native Linux DAW.
Seems FL Studio has some gold and even platinum ratings:
https://appdb.winehq.org/objectManager.php?sClass=application&iId=178
I liked the old name FruityLoops more, I guess it was too playful and toy-like, but FL Studio is just a crappy name imho.