That is even more complex. The thing that Wine (well CrossOver, which is the commercial entity that pays for Wine today) cares about is mostly productivity software (that might occasionally include some CAD-like thing that actually needs Direct3D). Well, running the desktop version of Kayako OneResponse (or what was the thing called? In ~2008) in wine needed some extent of weird NT-fu (mostly related to COM ), but we managed to actually package all of that as a debian package distributed to the customer who wanted that.
There were some forks that targeted gaming needs (20 years ago, winex and such things), but Valve with Proton, dxvk and what not actually caused that to be usable while not placing all that stuff behind a paywall (which the earlier projects eventually did. One could say that that is the exact reason why they became irrelevant).