Easiest way is by using remote play, you’ll want to change settings to enable audio on the host, and possibly lower stream bandwidth.
The guide also has another more in depth method.
“I can’t afford a new Xbox controller”
buys a steam deck
Unrelated, my friends and I are in a spat regarding how evil mashed potatoes are and do they mean us harm. I’ve sent them a screenshot of this saying I have at least one ally against the potatoes. So if anyone asks, be cool!
I would like to learn more.
It started with a meme from @chrishallbeck (I’m tagging him wrong, I don’t know how to do it or how to find hidden posts on sync) where he gets into a bathtub full of mashed potatoes. And I took it too far. Totally worth it.
There’s a joke to be made here about people loving the Steam Deck but not the Steam Controller
The controller on the deck is actually different though.
It’d be good if they can eventually make a controller that is actually based on the steamdeck’s controller design.
I would buy one as soon as I could.
Right, it has more inputs that I find attractive. Especially with Steam Input being a thing, I typically use trackpads as a virtual menu for some games (MMOs typically), with the sticks being the normal move/camera. Then the extra two buttons on the back, helps to bind extra commands to them or tie them to a mode shift.
A Steam Controller 2 with all the inputs of the deck would be a day 1 buy.
Yeah, trackpads in addition to joysticks, rather than instead of joysticks, is such a game changer.
The right stick not existing was a massive limitation with certain games.
It sometimes was but there were good alternatives for that. The much bigger problem imo was the lack of a dpad, using the trackpad for that was abysmal.
No, there were not.
There was literally no possible way to replicate something like a right stick spin move in a game like FIFA in a competent way.
Well ya know, it’s kinda inconvenient to carry around a keyboard and mouse on the airplane.
Skill issue
The second method, though needing a bit more config is the superior one.
It forwards the actual USB device that is the controller on the deck, to the PC.
The proprietary software seems like a user-friendly version of USB/IP
I’ve got some extra time today, so I’ll see if the free/built-in version is easy to get working.
That would be cool. Seems like it would have to work with the server on the deck if using it with a windows PC.
So, major caveat here: I’m a linux gamer and don’t have windows [subsystem for linux] available to test.
This actually works shockingly well for steam-steam gaming, but I’d call these steps proof-of-concept success versus “finished product”.
I’ll assume if you’re going this deep, you know how desktop mode works and you’re reasonably comfortable with the terminal. Otherwise, don’t follow random guides on the internet, and you understand that you could break things.
Obvious prerequisite: enable sudo by creating a password for the deck user
Enable installing packages via pacman: I borrowed from this guide, but didn’t follow it exactly.
# disable the deck's read-only mode sudo steamos-readonly disable # init the pacman keyring sudo pacman-key --init # populate the keyring with archlinux sudo pacman-key --populate archlinux
Install, start, and bind the usbip service on the steamdeck (steps from the “Server” portion of archwiki linked in my original comment above)
# install usbip sudo pacman -S usbip # enable/start the usbip daemon sudo systemctl enable usbip.service sudo systemctl start usbip.service # enable the kernel module sudo modprobe usbip-host # list the available usb devices usbip list --local # bind the Valve usb device (check the output of the above for the right bus id, mine happens to be 3-3) sudo usbip bind --busid=3-3
Install start and attach to the steamdeck (steps from the “Client” portion of archwiki listed above)
# install usbip sudo pacman -Sy usbip # enable the requisite kernel module sudo modprobe vhci-hcd # list the remote devices (use your steam desk's ip address, this assumes you're on the same network and have addressed any firewall/configuration issues) usbip list --remote 192.168.88.207 # attach to it sudo usbip attach --remote 192.168.88.207 --busid=3-3
Now you can be shocked when it works instantly. Go play a game!
If you turn this into a more complete guide, you should make it a post here on lemmy.
I am also a linux gamer.
Can you provide some insight on how to do this?
More than the linked guide?
Oops my bad, I didn’t even see the link, thought OP posted a text post.
Finally… Wii U 2.
I’d love if there were ways to use the controller and have the steam deck acknowledge this mode. Maybe then allow the monitor on the deck to do other things in the meantime.