VMWare Fusion 12 debuts with macOS Big Sur support, more

Posted:
in Mac Software edited September 2020
Software virtualization firm VMWare on Tuesday released Fusion 12 with support for Apple's macOS Big Sur, eGPU compatibility, DirectX 11 app and game integration, performance improvements and more.

VMWare Fusion 12


Teased in June ahead of an official announcement in August, VMWare Fusion 12 comes packed with the usual tools to get Windows, and a host of some 200 supported operating systems, up and running on Mac.

As a host, Mac can run Windows apps in the dock, access Apple's Metal graphics, support up to 8GB of virtual graphics memory, access BootCamp import and launch options, run virtual NVMe devices and deploy a desktop environment suitable for Kubernetes apps.

Performance maxes out at 32 vCPU and 128GB of RAM, while the aforementioned 8GB of VRAM help boost apps and services. VM operations and file transfer have been improved in Fusion 12. Users of Fusion 12 Pro can also connect to vSphere or ESXi hosts for remote workloads.

New to Fusion is the ability to run without kernel extensions, meaning the software is tapping into Apple's APIs for VM and container processing. This feature is limited to macOS Big Sur, however, with older versions of macOS retaining extension-based virtualization. The move is in part to future proof Fusion, as Apple is preparing to phase out kernel extensions altogether in upcoming macOS releases.

Security enhancements include a sandboxed vGPU rendering engine, support for Microsoft virtualization based security, a Virtual Trusted Platform Module (vTPM), secure boot options and, for Pro users, the ability to create and manage encrypted VMs.

VMWare has tweaked the price structure of its Fusion offerings and is marketing a free "Fusion Player" base tier for personal use. A commercial license costs $149, or $79 as an upgrade from Fusion 10 or 11.

The top-end Fusion 12 Pro incorporates additional features like virtual network customization, virtual network simulation, clone creation and encrypted VMs. Fusion 12 Pro comes in at $199 or as a $99 upgrade.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 19
    Will Fusion or any other similar product allow me to run two copies of macOS simultaneously on the same Mac? If not, could this change under Apple Silicon?
  • Reply 2 of 19
    sflocalsflocal Posts: 6,093member
    VMware Fusion has been fantastic for me since v4.  I will glad you have it again for my three macs, as well as when my new 10-core i9 arrives in a couple weeks!  VMWare continues to get my business.
    twokatmewRayz2016cat52
  • Reply 3 of 19
    chadbagchadbag Posts: 2,000member
    Will Fusion or any other similar product allow me to run two copies of macOS simultaneously on the same Mac? If not, could this change under Apple Silicon?
    Besides a couple Windows VMs I run a 10.13 macOS system in a VM so I can run my 32 but apps that I can't or won't upgrade. 
    twokatmew
  • Reply 4 of 19
    elijahgelijahg Posts: 2,759member
    Will Fusion or any other similar product allow me to run two copies of macOS simultaneously on the same Mac? If not, could this change under Apple Silicon?
    Both Fusion and Parallels allow you to run as many copies of macOS as you have the RAM for.
    twokatmewPhilapalooza
  • Reply 5 of 19
    elijahgelijahg Posts: 2,759member
    I wonder if they have x86 emulation in the works. Presumably not if they're using Apple's VM framework, since afaik Apple has said it does not do x86 emulation, though I suspect they'll add it if the demand is high enough, which I imagine it will be. I know a lot of people who use Windows on their Macs, and a few that only use Windows on their Macs...
    edited September 2020
  • Reply 6 of 19
    crowleycrowley Posts: 10,453member
    eGPU support is pretty cool. Would be interested in knowing how well that works.

    I can’t use my Razer Core X with my MacBook Air Bootcamped into Windows, but if I could use it on the same machine in macOS with Windows in a VM then that’d be even better. 
  • Reply 7 of 19
    Will Fusion or any other similar product allow me to run two copies of macOS simultaneously on the same Mac? If not, could this change under Apple Silicon?
    Other posters mentioned doing this with VMWare and Parallels. I'm running an older version of MacOS with VirtualBox which is free and has served me well for years.

     We'll see what we get with the VMWare free personal version but I am interested. That will have to hurt Parallels as the free VMWare version should be quite good for many home users.
    edited September 2020 cat52
  • Reply 8 of 19
    MacProMacPro Posts: 19,727member
    The free Player version has been the norm on the Windows side for years.  Just like the Windows side, finding the link to the Free version is a challenge.

    However, for those looking, there is no link.  You have to register first, even if like me you have an account for the paid version 11, you still have to create a new registration for the free version.
    edited September 2020 dewmecat52hcrefugee
  • Reply 9 of 19
    elijahg said:
    I wonder if they have x86 emulation in the works. Presumably not if they're using Apple's VM framework, since afaik Apple has said it does not do x86 emulation, though I suspect they'll add it if the demand is high enough, which I imagine it will be. I know a lot of people who use Windows on their Macs, and a few that only use Windows on their Macs...
    That’s a rather expensive way to run Windows. 
    mrmacgeek
  • Reply 10 of 19
    MacProMacPro Posts: 19,727member
    Rayz2016 said:
    elijahg said:
    I wonder if they have x86 emulation in the works. Presumably not if they're using Apple's VM framework, since afaik Apple has said it does not do x86 emulation, though I suspect they'll add it if the demand is high enough, which I imagine it will be. I know a lot of people who use Windows on their Macs, and a few that only use Windows on their Macs...
    That’s a rather expensive way to run Windows. 
    Too right lol.  That said, I have some old Macs that run Windows using Boot Camp as the default but I could use VMWare too if I so chose.  They are used as servers for MySQL running the Second Life opensource version called Dream Grid (https://www.outworldz.com/about.htm).  This is so all my friends around the world who want to own virtual 3D land and build stuff for free can enjoy themselves without needing to pay Linden Labs an arm and a leg.  
    edited September 2020
  • Reply 11 of 19
    Hey aiwould be great to see a parallels vs fusion vs actual PC comparison of speed and features 
  • Reply 12 of 19
    rob53rob53 Posts: 3,251member
    It appears the free Fusion Player does everything the Pro version does except for the following: https://www.vmware.com/products/fusion.html

    Virtual Network Customization (NAT, network rename)
    Virtual Network Simulation (Packet Loss, Latency, Bandwidth)
    Connect to vSphere/ESXi Server
    Remote vSphere Host Power Control
    Create Linked Clones
    Create Full Clones
    Encrypt VMs

    Start here: https://www.vmware.com/products/fusion.html The registration link for Fusion Player takes me to VMWare Horizon.

    Logged onto to VMWare and it only shows the Pro version for download so it appears you have to register for the Player version even if you've been a Fusion user for years. Clicking on Fusion 12 takes you to the commercial version. They've really messed things up.

    I gave up trying to get to whatever they were sending me to. Using my current account, they said I could register with that but it never actually took me to the Player app, only to some trial stuff. 

    ----
    Using this website: https://www.vmware.com/products/fusion/fusion-evaluation.html
    It says "Use the links below to start your free, fully functional 30-day trial, no registration required."

    https://www.vmware.com/go/getfusionplayer goes to Horizon trials and requires registration. https://vmware.com/go/get-fusionplayer-key also goes to this website.

    --I chatted with Support and got a bit further then the download link, Manually Download, didn't do anything. The support person went to try it and it cancelled out session.

    If you're already logged onto VMware, try https://my.vmware.com/web/vmware/evalcenter?p=fusion-player-personaland see if this gets you there.


    edited September 2020
  • Reply 13 of 19
    elijahgelijahg Posts: 2,759member
    Rayz2016 said:
    elijahg said:
    I wonder if they have x86 emulation in the works. Presumably not if they're using Apple's VM framework, since afaik Apple has said it does not do x86 emulation, though I suspect they'll add it if the demand is high enough, which I imagine it will be. I know a lot of people who use Windows on their Macs, and a few that only use Windows on their Macs...
    That’s a rather expensive way to run Windows. 
    It is, but they like the quality of Apple's hardware. 
  • Reply 14 of 19
    MacProMacPro Posts: 19,727member
    rob53 said:
    It appears the free Fusion Player does everything the Pro version does except for the following: https://www.vmware.com/products/fusion.html

    Virtual Network Customization (NAT, network rename)
    Virtual Network Simulation (Packet Loss, Latency, Bandwidth)
    Connect to vSphere/ESXi Server
    Remote vSphere Host Power Control
    Create Linked Clones
    Create Full Clones
    Encrypt VMs

    Start here: https://www.vmware.com/products/fusion.html The registration link for Fusion Player takes me to VMWare Horizon.

    Logged onto to VMWare and it only shows the Pro version for download so it appears you have to register for the Player version even if you've been a Fusion user for years. Clicking on Fusion 12 takes you to the commercial version. They've really messed things up.

    I gave up trying to get to whatever they were sending me to. Using my current account, they said I could register with that but it never actually took me to the Player app, only to some trial stuff. 

    ----
    Using this website: https://www.vmware.com/products/fusion/fusion-evaluation.html
    It says "Use the links below to start your free, fully functional 30-day trial, no registration required."

    https://www.vmware.com/go/getfusionplayer goes to Horizon trials and requires registration. https://vmware.com/go/get-fusionplayer-key also goes to this website.

    It works fine, you just register it as a product if you are already a registered user and then you can download it, and you are given a new serial number.  I have the free player up and running without issues.  It automatically loaded my Fusion 11 Library where I have about 20 VMs of both macOS, OSX, and Windows 10.

    TIP rename a previous version if you want to keep it (just in case) so it isn't overwritten.  Also with 12, you have to jump through the usual macOS SIP hoops.


    edited September 2020
  • Reply 15 of 19
    dr. xdr. x Posts: 282member
    rob53 said:
    It appears the free Fusion Player does everything the Pro version does except for the following: https://www.vmware.com/products/fusion.html

    Virtual Network Customization (NAT, network rename)
    Virtual Network Simulation (Packet Loss, Latency, Bandwidth)
    Connect to vSphere/ESXi Server
    Remote vSphere Host Power Control
    Create Linked Clones
    Create Full Clones
    Encrypt VMs

    Start here: https://www.vmware.com/products/fusion.html The registration link for Fusion Player takes me to VMWare Horizon.

    Logged onto to VMWare and it only shows the Pro version for download so it appears you have to register for the Player version even if you've been a Fusion user for years. Clicking on Fusion 12 takes you to the commercial version. They've really messed things up.

    I gave up trying to get to whatever they were sending me to. Using my current account, they said I could register with that but it never actually took me to the Player app, only to some trial stuff. 

    ----
    Using this website: https://www.vmware.com/products/fusion/fusion-evaluation.html
    It says "Use the links below to start your free, fully functional 30-day trial, no registration required."

    https://www.vmware.com/go/getfusionplayer goes to Horizon trials and requires registration. https://vmware.com/go/get-fusionplayer-key also goes to this website.

    --I chatted with Support and got a bit further then the download link, Manually Download, didn't do anything. The support person went to try it and it cancelled out session.

    If you're already logged onto VMware, try https://my.vmware.com/web/vmware/evalcenter?p=fusion-player-personaland see if this gets you there.



    Interesting, thanks for posting this. They should not make it so hard to obtain the free player version. If you already have an account like myself and you one shouldn't have to register again.

    dewme
  • Reply 16 of 19
    Rayz2016Rayz2016 Posts: 6,957member
    elijahg said:
    Rayz2016 said:
    elijahg said:
    I wonder if they have x86 emulation in the works. Presumably not if they're using Apple's VM framework, since afaik Apple has said it does not do x86 emulation, though I suspect they'll add it if the demand is high enough, which I imagine it will be. I know a lot of people who use Windows on their Macs, and a few that only use Windows on their Macs...
    That’s a rather expensive way to run Windows. 
    It is, but they like the quality of Apple's hardware. 
    Fairynuff. 
  • Reply 17 of 19
    dewmedewme Posts: 5,362member
    dr. x said:
    rob53 said:
    It appears the free Fusion Player does everything the Pro version does except for the following: https://www.vmware.com/products/fusion.html

    Virtual Network Customization (NAT, network rename)
    Virtual Network Simulation (Packet Loss, Latency, Bandwidth)
    Connect to vSphere/ESXi Server
    Remote vSphere Host Power Control
    Create Linked Clones
    Create Full Clones
    Encrypt VMs

    Start here: https://www.vmware.com/products/fusion.html The registration link for Fusion Player takes me to VMWare Horizon.

    Logged onto to VMWare and it only shows the Pro version for download so it appears you have to register for the Player version even if you've been a Fusion user for years. Clicking on Fusion 12 takes you to the commercial version. They've really messed things up.

    I gave up trying to get to whatever they were sending me to. Using my current account, they said I could register with that but it never actually took me to the Player app, only to some trial stuff. 

    ----
    Using this website: https://www.vmware.com/products/fusion/fusion-evaluation.html
    It says "Use the links below to start your free, fully functional 30-day trial, no registration required."

    https://www.vmware.com/go/getfusionplayer goes to Horizon trials and requires registration. https://vmware.com/go/get-fusionplayer-key also goes to this website.

    --I chatted with Support and got a bit further then the download link, Manually Download, didn't do anything. The support person went to try it and it cancelled out session.

    If you're already logged onto VMware, try https://my.vmware.com/web/vmware/evalcenter?p=fusion-player-personaland see if this gets you there.



    Interesting, thanks for posting this. They should not make it so hard to obtain the free player version. If you already have an account like myself and you one shouldn't have to register again.


    It's kind of crazy that VMware made this whole process so damn convoluted, especially for current license holders. I've been paying for (nearly) yearly upgrades since the very first version of Fusion hit the market. I hate having to jump through hoops, or what appears more like a puzzle game or easter egg hunt to find the free version to download.

    VMware seriously needs to hire a few qualified User Experience experts. They seem to be able to nail the technical details and low level complexity but their customer-facing web presence is retrograde at best. I suspect they'd rather have everything customer-facing done at the command prompt or in a Vim editor and only begrudgingly hired one or two people who kind-of knew what the acronym "UX" stands for. 
    hcrefugee
  • Reply 18 of 19
    rob53rob53 Posts: 3,251member
    dr. x said:
    rob53 said:
    It appears the free Fusion Player does everything the Pro version does except for the following: https://www.vmware.com/products/fusion.html

    Virtual Network Customization (NAT, network rename)
    Virtual Network Simulation (Packet Loss, Latency, Bandwidth)
    Connect to vSphere/ESXi Server
    Remote vSphere Host Power Control
    Create Linked Clones
    Create Full Clones
    Encrypt VMs

    Start here: https://www.vmware.com/products/fusion.html The registration link for Fusion Player takes me to VMWare Horizon.

    Logged onto to VMWare and it only shows the Pro version for download so it appears you have to register for the Player version even if you've been a Fusion user for years. Clicking on Fusion 12 takes you to the commercial version. They've really messed things up.

    I gave up trying to get to whatever they were sending me to. Using my current account, they said I could register with that but it never actually took me to the Player app, only to some trial stuff. 

    ----
    Using this website: https://www.vmware.com/products/fusion/fusion-evaluation.html
    It says "Use the links below to start your free, fully functional 30-day trial, no registration required."

    https://www.vmware.com/go/getfusionplayer goes to Horizon trials and requires registration. https://vmware.com/go/get-fusionplayer-key also goes to this website.

    --I chatted with Support and got a bit further then the download link, Manually Download, didn't do anything. The support person went to try it and it cancelled out session.

    If you're already logged onto VMware, try https://my.vmware.com/web/vmware/evalcenter?p=fusion-player-personaland see if this gets you there.



    Interesting, thanks for posting this. They should not make it so hard to obtain the free player version. If you already have an account like myself and you one shouldn't have to register again.

    I ended up getting an email, maybe from my chat session, that gave me the direct download link. You still need to register to get the license number. The download link is a crazy long URL so I have to wonder if it's tied to my VMWare account.
  • Reply 19 of 19
    rob53rob53 Posts: 3,251member

    MacPro said:
    rob53 said:
    It appears the free Fusion Player does everything the Pro version does except for the following: https://www.vmware.com/products/fusion.html

    Virtual Network Customization (NAT, network rename)
    Virtual Network Simulation (Packet Loss, Latency, Bandwidth)
    Connect to vSphere/ESXi Server
    Remote vSphere Host Power Control
    Create Linked Clones
    Create Full Clones
    Encrypt VMs

    Start here: https://www.vmware.com/products/fusion.html The registration link for Fusion Player takes me to VMWare Horizon.

    Logged onto to VMWare and it only shows the Pro version for download so it appears you have to register for the Player version even if you've been a Fusion user for years. Clicking on Fusion 12 takes you to the commercial version. They've really messed things up.

    I gave up trying to get to whatever they were sending me to. Using my current account, they said I could register with that but it never actually took me to the Player app, only to some trial stuff. 

    ----
    Using this website: https://www.vmware.com/products/fusion/fusion-evaluation.html
    It says "Use the links below to start your free, fully functional 30-day trial, no registration required."

    https://www.vmware.com/go/getfusionplayer goes to Horizon trials and requires registration. https://vmware.com/go/get-fusionplayer-key also goes to this website.

    It works fine, you just register it as a product if you are already a registered user and then you can download it, and you are given a new serial number.  I have the free player up and running without issues.  It automatically loaded my Fusion 11 Library where I have about 20 VMs of both macOS, OSX, and Windows 10.

    TIP rename a previous version if you want to keep it (just in case) so it isn't overwritten.  Also with 12, you have to jump through the usual macOS SIP hoops.


    When you say rename a previous version, are you talking about the the VMWare Fusion app, Virtual Machines folder or the VMs inside it? Thanks
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