


That always bugged me!Įxtra cursor keys on the onscreen keyboard is another nice touch, and gyroscope calibration has been upgraded to more intelligently account for possible drifting. My personal highlight: the Navigation pane in the SteamOS overly is now centered properly. Too many to just paste here, really, so have a read of the patch notes for the full list. On a happier note, there’s dozens of positive changes in the client update, ranging from UI improvements to bug fixes related to specific mice and keyboards. Hopefully this fix makes it way to Proton’s stable branch asap, as without it, all you’ll see after launching is this error screen: The horror. From my checks this morning, this does the trick, though the expected caveats about experimental branches lacking full testing will apply.
#UBISOFT CONNECT GAMES MANUAL#
Valve’s fix does require a moment of manual input, but it’s easy enough if you now find yourself locked out: open the Properties menu of the affected game, head to the Compatibility section, check "Force the use of a specific Steam Play compatibility tool" and select Proton Experimental from the list. James recently bought a load of unusual Steam Deck accessories from Etsy before asking Liam to review them.
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Indeed, just like the 2K Launcher last year, with the added irony that the affected games (which include The Division 2, Watch Dogs Legion and Ghost Recon Breakpoint) only arrived on Steam in the past few weeks.
#UBISOFT CONNECT GAMES UPDATE#
Ubi’s launcher had received an update of its own, sadly one that interfered with the ability of Proton – the layer of software that helps made-for-Windows games run on the Linux-based SteamOS – to keep it compatible with the Deck. In addition to a huge client update for the handheld PC, Valve pushed out a Proton Experimental update to fix a crashing problem with games that use the Ubisoft Connect launcher on Steam. Last night was a restless one for the Steam Deck.
