For anyone looking for multiple monitors as best I can tell the feature doesn't work despite having options that look like they should work.
What you actually need to do is described here VMware Knowledge Base
Then you can use VNC (like TightVNC server) to map each "screen" to a different port and log in with two vnc client sessions, one to each monitor. Drag and drop across the screens is a little sketchy but this is the best solution I can find.
These are the requirements:
VMware supports AMD and NVIDIA graphics cards. See the vendor website for supported cards. To use the graphics card or GPU hardware, download the appropriate VMware graphics driver from the vendor website.
Linux distributions must have a 3.2 or later kernel. If 3D is not available on a Linux guest, verify that the driver is available in the Linux kernel. If it is not available, upgrade to a more recent Linux distribution. The location of the kernel depends on whether the distribution is based on deb
or rpm.
For anyone looking for multiple monitors as best I can tell the feature doesn't work despite having options that look like they should work.
What you actually need to do is described here VMware Knowledge Base
Then you can use VNC (like TightVNC server) to map each "screen" to a different port and log in with two vnc client sessions, one to each monitor. Drag and drop across the screens is a little sketchy but this is the best solution I can find.