Things you wished you knew before setting up your Deck?
Things you wished you knew before setting up your Deck?
Yes - there’s lots of stuff on the internet about tweaking settings for games. In my experience they generally run pretty well out of the box without doing anything.
Even controls I’ve mostly not had to do anything, only for a couple of games that are really not designed for console had to do any control scheme creation (e.g. FTL).
To go along with that. The right trigger is left click and the left trigger is right click. Also, left shoulder is Ctrl.
Those things changed my life.
sudo apt install sshfs then read the man páge with man sshfs to learn how to use it.
Almost forgot, before everything, you should drain your battery all the way to 0% to recalibrate it.
To do that, drain the battery to 1%, and turn it off. Turn your Steam Deck on holding the Vol- button, you should boot into the BIOS. Leave it until it turns it self off.
Now charge it until completely full.
You can check the battery heath in Desktop Mode.
But ye, good suggestion.
Because the SteamOS may show the wrong percentage, as consequence, you may experience poor battery performance.
I left my Steam Deck untouched for months, when I turned it on, it shown me 60% of battery heath, but doing the recalibration fixed the problem, and the battery heath increased to 86%.
If you want to play retro games check out Retrodeck AND Emudeck. Read up on how they both function before deciding which one to use. One is kind of a bunch of scripts that downloads and installs emulators all over the place and one has them all contained in a flatpak.
I forgot which is which
if you happen to have a desktop PC and you play while at home, sometimes remote play on the deck is better than installing a game on the deck
I can remote play Elden Ring from my desktop at 60fps with longer battery life vs 40fps if installed on the deck with worse battery life
also make sure you try out reduced TDP and GPU rates on games with simpler graphics, you can get an extra 1-2 hours of battery life and not impact performance in certain cases
yes the game does run on the remote desktop pc and essentially streams the video to the steam deck
I’ll admit the use cases can be limited, but if you want the ability to offload processing for graphically intense games it works well
my desktop is hard-wired into my network so I don’t have any lag when using remote play on my steam deck
I’m not sure if both machines were wireless how the performance might be impacted
Oh shit how can you do this?
My internet at home is usually <3mb download, >300kb upload, and rate limited at 100gb a month. Worse up/downs when it rains.
I set up a spare phone to download files to a specific folder, then automatically backup those files over LAN to my desktop at home. When I go to a friend’s house with better internet I just leave the phone there overnight. This is working for everything except my steam games, which I don’t think I can download to a phone
It’s pretty easy assuming both of your devices are on the same network:
if you have a good home network it is pretty much indistinguishable from playing it directly on the deck
I can play Elden Ring with no video artifacts or noticeable input lag
here is a guide which has some screenshots
Also, you don’t necessarly need to Reflash the Image with a new SSD (but still the safer option).
I just made an image with dd and saved it on a usb Drive.
Restored the image on the new SSD, while it was plugged onto my main pc, and just swapped the SSD on the deck.
I was suprised the deck automatically expanded the main partition to fill up the entire space.
DOSBox-staging has fluidsynth built-in. So, unlike vanilla DOSBox, there’s no need to install a separate MIDI synthesizer.
(I was so positively surprised by this, I even wrote a very lengthy blog post about Dosbox with MIDI on the Steam Deck.)
I wish I had known at the beginning that its not a delicate porcelain device. If you break the software, its easy to discover the right Linux command to fix it. Or you can plan ahead before tinkering, take a backup image, and just reimage it.
And if something goes wrong hardware-wise, its easy to open up and work on. All the parts, seriously all of them are able to be sourced from reputable companies and can be quickly installed.
I was scared of hurting it day one, but Ive since learned that you cant. Tinker away!
Worth noting that the default isn’t 1GB. The default is “auto” and the Deck will try to dynamically adjust between more VRAM and more system RAM as needed.
This works fine for most games, but for some it helps if all 4GB is immediately visible without having to ramp up.
If you want a fancy replacement shell you have to de-laminate the LCD screen from the old shell first. Depending on the kit you buy DON’T use a metal spudger for removing the LCD and take your time, or you will have a bad time.
Side note, Ifixit sells direct replacement LCD panels and the kit for doing a better job removing the LCD if you don’t already have them.