

Improved Accessibility – Accessibility controls in compliance with VPAT Section 508, helping users get the full benefits of virtual machines.eGPU Compatibility – Fusion Player and Pro will support eGPU devices, helping offload the resource-taxing graphics rendering process from the internal integrated or discrete GPU, to a much more powerful external one.Dark Mode – For Workstation Pro and Player UIs, a new Dark Mode feature will seamlessly align with the latest versions of Windows 10, including the recently released 2004 build.

Windows 10 Hyper-V Mode – VMware Workstation products support running VMs, containers and Kubernetes clusters on PCs with Windows 10 version 2004 that have Hyper-V mode enabled.DirectX 11 and OpenGL 4.1 –Running games and apps support with Direct3D version 11 or OpenGL 4.1.When you click a link and make a purchase, we may receive a small payment, which helps us keep the site running.

Note: MacRumors is an affiliate partner with VMware. For users with systems still on macOS Mojave, a Fusion 12 license key will be valid to activate Fusion 11.5.6 on those machines. In order to keep up with Apple's advancing technologies, Fusion 12 requires macOS Catalina or Big Sur. Fusion 12 Pro is priced at $199, or $99 as an upgrade. Notably, this is a cross-platform license that allows for any combination of three machines using Fusion 12 or Workstation 16 across Mac, Windows, and Linux. Discounted education pricing will also be available, although many of those users will qualify for free personal licensing.įusion 12 Pro, aimed at developers and IT professionals rather than typical consumer and business users, offers some additional features and a license to run on up to three machines. A commercial license is priced at $149, with a $79 upgrade license available. The basic level of Fusion is now known as Fusion 12 Player and is free for personal use for the first time.

With the launch of Fusion 12, VMware is also restructuring its licensing to bring it in line with Workstation 16, Fusion's sister software for Windows and Linux. On systems running macOS Catalina, Fusion 12 will continue to run with kernel extensions as it has in the past, but on macOS Big Sur, Fusion will take advantage of Apple's APIs to run virtual machines and containers. Last month, VMware announced the next major version of its virtualization software for Mac, Fusion 12, and as of today, the update is now available.Īs we noted last month, Fusion 12 includes a number of updates and improvements, such as eGPU compatibility, support for container-based applications built with Kubernetes, DirectX 11 and OpenGL 4.1 support, improved security for the sandbox rendering engine, improved accessibility controls, and more.įusion 12 has also been optimized for macOS Big Sur, with both host and guest support for Apple's upcoming release.
