@WN2A :-
O-kay. Well; unless you've got a pressing need to HAVE to run the newest, most bang-up-to-date build of WINE - for whatever reason! - we do have older, 'portable' builds that work just fine.
Do you have a specific use-case that requires a 9-series build? What are you trying to run?
To the majority of people, conditioned by Windows and mainstream Linux to believe that it's critical to run the very newest version of everything, ALL THE TIME, the somewhat "laid-back" nature of Puppy Linux comes as something of a shock. Unless it's a browser, or something else connected to the internet - which we DO insist on keeping up-to-date - the general advice for software is "If it works, leave it alone"!
All the WINE-portables I've put together can be found here:-
https://drive.sukudir.com/drive/s/qdZ1A ... UOWoIcnJkJ
It's only the 9-series that need the newer glibc.......but since we don't have a 'simple' way to upgrade the glibc in Puppy (it can be done, but it's very much a 'manual' process, and you DO need to know what you're doing), the usual advice is just to use a newer Puppy for this. With the way Puppy and the portables work, you can easily boot into a LiveSession of Puppy from the ISO, run whatever portable you need for your purposes.....then shut it all down and go back to your 'daily-driver' when you're done. Either that, or just set-up a 'vanilla' frugal install of a newer Pup beside your existing one, link a 9-series WINE-portable into it & use that for your Windoze 'fix'!
If you let us know what Windows apps/programs you want to run, I'll do some research and see what's needed. Or, you could always investigate yourself, at WineHQ:-
https://appdb.winehq.org/
Go to 'Browse Apps' in the left pane, find what you're looking for (set the search tool to 200 items per page, else it'll take forever to find anything), and see what it says about compatibility. Most Windows stuff will generally run fine, but some items still won't 'play nice' with WINE.
You MAY be OK with the 5.11 build. This is MY general "workhorse", and happily runs every one of the few Windows apps I regularly use.
Mike.