Hi, some of their bundle either reqire i-lok, or it's PACE i-lock software manager*, and some are not linux friendly due to complexity, and poor design.
With a modern wine-staging, the UJAM, Plugin Alliance Ampeg, and LABS might work. Ableton Lite might work, although
I would rather recycle broken glass from a sewer, than use it to make music Ardour, Reaper, Mixbus, Qtractor, Carla, Bitwig
and Renoise are fine native linux DAWs with a wide range of features and styles to meet various preferences.
*sometimes the 'ilok software manager' works in wine-staging, sometimes not. The more 'industry standard' your computer is,
the better. wine-staging is found at www.winehq.org There will be 'stable' and testing versions to choose from.
Browse their site for a wine installer for your distro. It will have around 4 copy/paste commands to set up
their repository and install your choice. Works well in debian/ubuntu variants, likely the other distros as well.
If you already have a wine version installed, uninstall it fully first, to avoid conflicts, using your distro package manager, synaptic
is common, Arch, Fedora and, Suse have their own tools for management.
Lately, using the AVLinux distro, the IK Multimedia Product Manager tool has been successfull,
and IK offer many excellent free versions of excellent software as teasers. With the caveats
that they may install gigabytes of (quality) content, and you may need to be online for their
'Custom Shop' and manager tools to do their thing, which is part of their deal. The shop is handy, and allows for testing
and ala-cart purchases from their large catalog. An IK account is needed, but over the years, has proved
to be a valuable resource, with lots of functionality. I've been using the Amplitube and Mixbox plugins together,
to easily craft unique signal chains.
Another avenue is the new Studio One 6.5 linux daw, still in beta, and with a narrow ubuntu distro requirement,
that will be bundled with some of the PreSonus hardware. If a mixer etc is on you purchase list,
or if the Volt 2 is not love-at-first-sight, there are other audio interfaces known to work well in linux.
Cheers