This has nothing to do with maturity. Only with the existence of someone
willing to maintain it - and its dependencies if needed. They don't publish
it as anything else than a Flatpak as that's by far the easiest way to make
sure it works for everyone, and thus they don't officially support any
other packaging frameworks. And since they don't just support Wine but also
Proton, and games benefit a lot from the latest drivers and libraries, so
packaging it for more conservative distros would entirely defeat at least
half of its purpose. And I guess Flatpaks isolation from the rest of the
system can be helpful in other ways too.

So either learn to accept other packaging formats or learn to live with the
fact that you may miss out on a lot if you don't invest a lot of time
figuring out how to compile the software by hand.

Am Mo., 1. Juli 2024 um 06:13 Uhr schrieb George at Clug <
c...@goproject.info>:

> Mostly I only install software that is available in the Debian or Arch
> repositories, and I cannot find Bottles in the Debian Repository. I do not
> use snaps or flatpacks. Maybe I should but I don't.
> Hopefully one day, Bottles will mature to the point it can go through the
> Debian packaging system. I appreciate Debian's packaging systems.
>

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