• xavier666@lemm.ee
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    1 month ago

    The current way to play Epic/GoG/Amazon games on the Steam Deck is

    • Switch to desktop mode
    • From the app store, search for Heroic Launcher and install
    • Launch Heroic
    • Put login credentials for Epic/GoG/Amazon
    • Wait for your library to get populated
    • Install the games
    • Add Heroic as a non-Steam application
    • Switch back to Big Picture mode
    • Launch Heroic
    • Play games

    While the number of steps seems like a lot, if you compare against the Windows equivalent, it’s not a lot simply because Windows has no Big Picture/console mode. I personally hate the desktop mode in Windows because I’m forced to use the touchscreen constantly.

    What would you like to be changed in this process?

    • MudMan@fedia.io
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      1 month ago

      I am aware of the set of steps, but a) I’ve had issues getting it to work in the past, particularly getting new games to install under Steam as opposed to adding them in Desktop mode every time and b) what I want is an official way to install and launch third party games, or at least third party launchers from within Steam, the way GOG Galaxy or even Heroic itself supports.

      Right now, I play those on Windows handhelds instead, where the steps are:

      • Boot the device
      • Click on the launcher you want

      Which is similar to doing this on Linux desktop, where the steps are:

      • Boot the device
      • Click on the launcher you want

      Oh, and for the record, as I said above, Windows absolutely does have a Big Picture mode. You can set up Steam to launch on boot straight into Big Picture. If all you want is to play Steam games you never have to use the Desktop on Windows either. Because I do play a ton of GOG games and emulation over Retroarch I prefer to boot into Desktop where my launchers are pinned to the taskbar, so it’s literally one tap to open whichever launcher I want. But Steam absolutely goes into Big Picture after that. Like I said earlier the only functional difference is that the settings button brings up the proprietary screen and power manager instead of the SteamOS Game Mode alternative, but otherwise the Steam interface is much the same.

      Why do people not realize this is the case? Big Picture was available on Windows (at boot, even) long before the Deck happened. I’ve been a longtime Steam-on-TV user, this isn’t new.

      • xavier666@lemm.ee
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        1 month ago

        what I want is an official way to install and launch third party games, or at least third party launchers from within Steam

        While I think this would be great for everybody, but I think the money-oriented guys inside Valve would think it’s a bad idea. If you present an easy way to install other launcher to the masses, people will be swayed away from buying from the Steam store. Valve wants publishers to stay on their store; that is their trump card. I remember someone tried putting an alternate store on Steam Store and it was quickly removed to avoid legal troubles.

        Windows absolutely does have a Big Picture mode. You can set up Steam to launch on boot straight into Big Picture. If all you want is to play Steam games you never have to use the Desktop on Windows either

        BigPicture in Windows is extremely nerfed compared to Bazzite/SteamOS which I have detailed in this comment and further elaborated in this post. The tl;dr version is “yes you can use BigPicture but you still have to deal with a lot of Windows shenanigans”

        Source: I’m a user of both Steam Deck OLED and ROG Ally.