this post was submitted on 26 Jul 2023
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If the games run in a modern Linux desktop with an AMD GPU, they will work on the Steam Deck.
If you add them to Steam, you get access to the granular control over every input. If you don't, the Steam Deck will essentially behave as a Xbox 360 controller.
That's about it, really. The Steam Deck is no different than a desktop PC running Linux.
As for the other distros, they will work, but you'll lose a lot: fan curves will be worse, you'll lose precise haptic feedback, the touchpads will not behave correctly.
Thanks for the reply, this is really helpful!
I see, this makes sense and I guess the "Xbox 360" experience will depend on whether the games themselves have native support for controllers or a very flexible input scheme.
This is interesting, do you know what would be the difference between using the touchpads on other distros vs through SteamOS? Are they not just seen as a regular mouse input device by both OSs?
I believe this might be fixed if you install Steam and leave it always running in the background of your new distro.
But in general, the touchpads will act like a track pad and the triggers as mouse click buttons on generic distros. But on SteamOS, they run as a simulated trackball with friction, momentum, a very nice haptic feedback and very granular control over acceleration. They also click down by themselves, with customizable pressure, without relying on the triggers.
Gotcha. Now I understand a bit more about the way input is locked down, it looks like I would need OpenSD to allow for more sophisticated controller input without using Steam.