@abunk8691

Thanks for the update! 
Results are mostly kinda what I expected of VMware doing better under Windows and VirtualBox slightly better under Linux. 

VMware under Linux has given me issues with its recompiling modules on every Linux kernel update (which sometimes fails) and not showing any of my guest machines at all necessitating that I open the .vmx file for each one every time.

I'll still stick to VMware on Windows then KVM/QEMU on Linux. 

That is because in my experience the VirtualBox Guest Additions break and need a reinstall when the hypervisor portion (regardless if Windows or Linux host) updates which has happened to me many times breaking my Windows guest install. Though for Linux guests on VirtualBox its not much of an issue since the drivers for the Guest Additions are mostly baked into the kernel for relatively recent Linux kernel versions (anything from 5.4 and later should be fine in my experience).

@zachbeckner

Thanks for making this.  Great and to the point.  I wouldn't mind seeing any tips to make the Linux versions run better

@UVgamerking

Your iGpu Videos are awesome 2500 vs 4600 vs 530 vs gt710👍

@MotownBatman

I have VirtualBox currently Setup on Debian 12.  On a 5300g with 32GiB Ram
Windows 10 seems to working pretty well, Windows 7 gives me Networking Passthru issues.
I need to install Win 11 this afternoon, I dont have a Nice GPU, I have Kiddos. 
Well Done sir!

@loserguy1234

Finally you posted after a looong break

@catgirlapril

QEMU/KVM would probably best both and is generally considered to be the fastest virtualisation software on GNU/Linux. With that being said there is no 3D acceleration on Windows guests as there is not yet a (stable) driver.

@highgunner8715

Why do u make only one video per few months please make more videos love ur videos

@substratum3d

How does Autodesk fusion run?

@BananaTurtles

MacOS next pld