Wacom Intuos Pen & Touch + Linux + Bottles experience?

Hi everyone,

I’m wondering if anyone is using a Wacom Intuos Pen & Touch on Linux with the Nomad Sculpt Windows version via Bottles.

I’m particularly curious about:
Does the pen pressure sensitivity work fully?
How usable are the touch functions on Linux?
Are the ExpressKeys practical in Nomad Sculpt, and does anyone have a recommended layout?
Any compatibility issues I should be aware of?

Any experience or tips would be very helpful, thanks in advance!

I hope you succeded becuase I want to do just this. I hope there will be a Linux version of Nomad too since Zbrush is now off limits. I am using a Wacom Cintiqu on Windows but want to jump to Linux soon

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I ended up solving it, though my final setup looked a little different from what I originally planned.

I also dropped Bottles — Nomad Sculpt is now running on plain Wine. For some reason, Bottles’ sandboxed environment was cutting off the pen’s pressure sensitivity, and I didn’t feel like spending hours debugging it when I could just install regular Wine in 5 minutes and have everything working immediately.

Since I have a dual-monitor setup, I had to map the tablet to one screen using an xinput remap. Just a heads up though — this only works on X11, it won’t work under Wayland.

Good luck, hope this was helpful!

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Thank you for the information, also what Linux distro do you use? I have been thinking about using Ubuntu because I have been told that lots of VFX people use it and some Linux distros do not have all the suitable libraries.

Have you ever used Zbrush and run it in Wine?

I use Ubuntu 20.04.4 LTS with Wine 11.0 to run Nomad Sculpt. I skip ZBrush. I know it’s considered the industry standard, but Nomad Sculpt perfectly handles what I need for my 3D-printed custom jewelry business.

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Great. Thank you :slight_smile:

I started using Nomad on my tablet, it was amazing, I could go to a coffee shop and kick out a model rather then having to sit at home. I have got even more models made ever since using Nomad. Its just like using a sketchpad. very glad its now on Windows. It has real advantages that Zbrush does not even though its quite basic. Its very good for just kicking out a concept sculpt and I love it.

What I have been doing is producing the base meshes in Nomad and then importing them into Zbrush.

I call Nomad sculpt pocket Zbrush and I suspect people in the industry use it unoffically because it really is very powerful. Its extreamly good for tasks that involve multiple subtools, this is a pain in the arse compared to Zbrush where you have to select the layer itself like photoshop in a seperate panel, it really is just a chore. When I am doing an animal that has lots of teeth it drives me absolutley spare.

Just wish there was a Linux version of Nomad because i really want to switch, there should be even more support for it now, we have alot of countries in Europe running away from Microslop and Mac.