
Infinity Nikki has now launched on Steam to suck away more of your time. It works on Steam Deck with Proton but the anti-cheat is blocking it working on Desktop Linux.

Having looked that up, I'm curious how you hold your deck with only one hand.
My big two games recently have been Blue Prince (which I made a post raving about a week ago), and Clair Obscura: Expedition 33.
Blue Prince is a fantastic puzzle game/rogue-likes mix, and as someone who enjoys both genres I've found their combination is fantastic. Really satisfying game for me, I didn't close the game on my deck for about a week after first trying it. I'm not done with it yet either, lots more to discover.
Clair Obscura Expedition 33 is a really flashy turn based JRPG made by a team of 30 people who quit Ubisoft because they wanted to make good games. It has incredible production values for such a small team and puts a lot of AAA games to shame. It pushes the deck performance wise, but I think it performs acceptably after tweaking some settings. I'd recommend people follow this guide for making it run it's best, but the TL;DW is:
The game hides some graphics settings on deck by default and uses a deck specific present. You can re-enable the settings by using the launch option
SteamDeck=0 %command%
, and customize it to your liking. Basically it's TSR to low, shadow and post processing to low, film grain off, chromatica off, motion blur off, any other option to medium, FPS capped at 30.
I'm playing Clair Obscura and it's running acceptably well by my standards.
The game hides some graphics settings on deck by default and uses a deck specific present. You can re-enable the settings by using the launch option SteamDeck=0 %command%
, and customize it to your liking. I've been following this video's settings and have been pretty happy with the results. Basically it's TSR to low, shadow and post processing to low, film grain off, chromatica off, motion blur off, any other option to medium, FPS cap to 30.
What are you playing on your Deck? - May 2025
Distrobox is also a good option for installing stuff without flatpak.
Yeah, I had mostly stayed away from arch based distros after having a really bad time with Manjaro. But hearing the Steam Deck's version of SteamOS was switching to an Arch base got me to try Endeavour on my desktop, and I've been using it ever since.
https://github.com/ryanrudolfoba/SteamOS-Waydroid-Installer
Not disagreeing with your point, but at least for waydroid there's a specific SteamOS installer available.
As some others have said, the problem is probably that windows still has the drive locked. When windows "shuts down", it actually is only closing your programs and going into hibernation. This leaves the drive in a read only state, which will prevent you from being able to resize the partition.
To do a full shutdown, you can hold shift while pressing the shutdown button on the start menu. Alternatively run shutdown /s /f /t 0
in a administrative command prompt.
Personally I would have preferred them to say it more explicitly, but I'm assuming their idea is people provide the knowledge for wikipedia, and AI should help smooth out the other necessary parts (moderation/editing/translation/etc) so that contributors can focus more on the knowledge part.
Desktop experience is just KDE, only part that I'm worried will trip people up is it being immutable. Usually that's fine, but occasionally you run into an issue where something doesn't work because of flatpak sandboxing, and it can be confusing how to overcome it.
It's working, I know people who don't even own a steam deck who are considering swapping to SteamOS once it's available for desktops.
I've told them they don't need to wait and can get a similar or better experience with distros that are already available, but steam's name is gold for a lot of people and it seems like the only option they're really interested in.
That's my guess, that they're looking for a specific hardware identification and the OLED was overlooked.
I just recently bought a dryer. When I first got my printer, I was printing pretty constantly and didn't really have an issue with wet filament. But these days I've slowed down my printing frequency a lot, and I've definitely noticed that the print quality gets worse the longer I've had the roll unsealed.
Infinity Nikki on Steam works on Steam Deck LCD, but not OLED Deck or Desktop Linux
Infinity Nikki has now launched on Steam to suck away more of your time. It works on Steam Deck with Proton but the anti-cheat is blocking it working on Desktop Linux.
The game has ACE anti-cheat that blocks it from running on desktop. They've made an exception for steam deck to let the game run, but it seems like it only works with the LCD deck. A very odd situation
TDP limits can sometimes give you increased battery life with no change in game quality. However if you ever notice the game freezing or stuttering, make sure to disable TDP limit and see if that fixes it.
I've heard that using BTRFS with compression on a microSD and other slow access storage can actually speed up load times, because the biggest bottleneck is the read/write speed.
You can use this tool to convert the deck.
The only downside I know of is that if your SteamOS install becomes corrupted (though a bug or from you messing something up), the Steam OS recovery drives won't be able to fix it without wiping all your internal data. In comparison, with the original ext4 there's a recovery option to only repair steamOS and leave your data intact.
This isn't as bad as it sounds, you can still manually backup any of your important data before wiping and restoring the drive (you can access the BTRFS system from the recovery drive, and copy anything important onto a microSD or other storage device), but it's definitely less convenient.
It has split screen, so we play docked on a TV.
It does have online play too though, there's a free friend's pass that you can use for two people to play online with one copy. However even in online play you'll be playing split screen, because it's often important to be able to see the other player's screen.
I haven't bought the game yet, but I've been told this guy's setting list on ProtonDB is supposed to help a lot.
Also apparently changing graphics options on the game leads often leads to bad performance issues for that session. After changing settings, if it seems like the game is running worse, you will likely need to restart the game to see how well it will actually run with the new settings.
I'm pretty interested in Spellrogue. Dice and deck builders go really well together, Slice & Dice and Dicey Dungeons are both 10/10 and very satisfying to play. I've heard good things about Spellrogue while it was in early access, so I'm hoping it will be another great option.
Best Buy have recently increased the price they're listing for the two upcoming Lenovo - Legion Go S models with Valve's SteamOS. They seem to have taken down pre-orders too, with it now just being listed as Coming Soon.
- AMD Ryzen Z2 Go edition is now $599.99 before it was $549.99.
- AMD Ryzen Z1 Extreme edition is now $829.99 before it was $749.99.
Originally, Lenovo said they expected it to launch for $499.99 for the Z2 Go edition — $100 is quite a big bump now from their original plan.
How recently was it added to your GoG library? It's not uncommon for new games to not show up for awhile if GoG is having any server issues.
If the game isn't a recent addition to your library, and relogging into GoG doesn't fix it, you might try Junk Store and see if it shows the game.
Cool, thanks for sharing. I was wondering how you switched the arcade controls without swapping cables, unfortunate to hear it's a pain. I've been wanting to do a virtual pinball build for awhile now, and I really like the idea of having the device be useable without my deck docked to it. I'll probably see if I can figure out a good way to swap devices, maybe try using a usb switch and hdmi switch to swap inputs/display.
I would like to recommend Blue Prince to anyone who likes puzzle games
Welcome to Mt. Holly, where every dawn unveils a new mystery. Navigate through shifting corridors and ever-changing chambers in this genre-defying strategy puzzle adventure. But will your unpredictable path lead you to the rumored Room 46?
It's fantastic and runs great on the Deck. I kept hearing people talking about how great and unique it was, and I'm really glad I jumped on it when I did.
The game is unique and doesn't really compare directly to any other games I know of. The core game play is kinda similar to a board game, you're building a house layout by choosing between randomly chosen room tiles. In-between adding rooms, you're exploring the house in first person, and solving puzzles on the way. There's also a resource management system, where you sometimes need a keys and other resorces to progress into new rooms. At the end of the day the mansion resets and you start over.
Overall the game is an interesting mix of board games, rogue-likes, puzzles, resource management, knowledge-gated progression, permanent puzzle progression, and environmental story tellings. That's a lot of things, but they work well together and I'm just getting more and more invested in fully exploring this game.
The Elder Scrolls 4: Oblivion Remastered revealed, it's out now and Steam Deck Verified
Bethesda Softworks today officially revealed and launched The Elder Scrolls 4: Oblivion Remastered, after days of leaks. And from what they've revealed, I'm very excited to give it a go. It's even Steam Deck Verified right from the get-go.
It is a UE5 game, so don't expect it to run great. But it's verified and the minimum specs requirements are in line with other high end titles that run acceptably on the deck.
Edit: performance first impressions from SteamDeckHQ. Sounds like it runs and a pretty consistent 30fps, with some small dips outside near large groups of people. Reviewer was using XESS upscaling on performance.
With help from the Steam Deck, this 3D-printed virtual pinball machine is one of the most impressive mods we've ever seen.
Hogwarts Legacy Adds FSR 3 and XeSS 2 With Mod Fixes in New Update
Hogwarts Legacy got a new update that brought with it FSR 3 and XeSS 2 upscaling, as well as a bunch of mod fixes on Steam Deck.
The updated AMD Ryzen Z2 A processor is based on the APU in the Steam Deck and uses RDNA2 architecture, according to a reliable leaker.
This shouldn't be for a steam deck 2, but rather some other handheld.
My (uninformed speculation) is this will likely be for another steamOS device made by some other hardware vendor. It will probably have similar performance to the deck, but with minor upgrades like more RAM/VRAM.
More powerful handheld chips exist, but the steam Deck's APU is very power efficient compared to the alternatives, so I think there's value in companies using an upgraded version of it over the alternatives.
We Can Now Easily Play Minecraft Splitscreen On The Steam Deck Thanks to a New Script
Someone created a script to automatically set up Minecraft for splitscreen play on the Steam Deck!
It's using PolyMC to launch multiple instances (depending on how many connected controllers there are) and automatically tile them. I would personally suggest using an optimized minecraft build like Fabulously Optimized to minimize any performance hit from having that many players.
V Rising 1.1 - Invaders of Oakveil will bring lots of new content and official Steam Deck support
V Rising 1.1 - Invaders of Oakveil is set to release on April 28th and it's going to bring much improved and official support for the Steam Deck.
Schedule I is high up on my wishlist to eventually play-through, thankfully being in Early Access I've got plenty of time to get to it and it's only going to get better with full Steam Deck support planned.
EmuDeck Releases New Plugin for Your Emulated Library Into Open Beta, adds new library for accessing retro games
EmuDeck has released a new plugin called "Retro Library" into open beta for the Steam Deck, and it should make accessing your emulated games easier.
Steam Deck Refurbished Back in Stock (UK, and maybe EU)
Steam Deck refurbished models are back in stock in the UK, offering up to 20% off the usual retail price.
We Can Now Get Steam Deck Buttons Made Out Of Stone
We can now buy Steam Deck buttons that are made of stone, thanks to manufacturer Deck Buttons!
The same website makes metal buttons, resin buttons with real bugs inside, and more. Overall it's not really anything I'm personally interested, but I love that the deck has enough support, and is tinker friendly enough, that stuff like this is even an option.
A list of PC ports, recompiles, fan games, and more that all work on Steam Deck
Just a handy list of PC Ports, Decompilations, Recompilations Remakes, Demakes, Fan Games, Texture Packs etc... 2 Ship 2 Harkinian - The Legend of Zelda Majora's Mask PC Port or the RECOMPILATION Abe's Odyssey/Exodus PC Port/Recompilation Alien Vs Predator 2 + Primal Hunt & also Here AM2R
New Stable Steam Client update for Deck and Desktop
A new Steam client has been released and will be automatically downloaded. General Fixed brief layout shift of elements (one or two frames) when navigating back to the library section. Fixed Steam Client window focusing multiple times on startup. Fixed Update News window being covered by Steam Clien...
Satisfactory Will Finally Get Controller Support With 1.1 Update
Satisfactory will finally be getting controller support with its 1.1 update, and it will make playing on the Steam Deck so much better.
Steam Deck OLED 1TB Certified Refurbished back in stock in the US
Steam Deck™ is the most powerful, full-featured gaming handheld in the world.
If you want one is suggest acting fast, they typically sell out quickly.