VirtNerding

I know quite a lot about virtualization, so Iโ€™d always wondered why graphics performance on a desktop/consumer PC couldnโ€™t be โ€œpassed throughโ€ with 95% of the original performance as everything else can โ€“ so for instance you could run a hypervisor on top of Linux, and then boot up Windows and run games in that with nearly the same performance as a native game in Linux.

Iโ€™d always assumed โ€“ because Iโ€™d never looked into it โ€“ that there was some obscure technical reason even though I could not think of one.

Nope, itโ€™s all just vendor gouging.

So to sum up that, because Nvidia (and I am sure AMD too) wants you to buy their $1,500 GPU, they deliberately break the possibility of having decent 3-D GPU performance on consumer cards with virtualization.

Well, that answers the question of why I couldnโ€™t think of any technical reason this shouldnโ€™t be possible.

Because it is possible, and is done already (if you buy the $1,500 GPU), but itโ€™s just blocked for consumer use.

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