It’s mostly just ArchLinux with preinstalled steam, booting into “big picture” ui. You can do the same thing as with any linux distro. Nearly all non competitive games from steam should work ootb.
The important part is a lot of people don’t really care about operating systems, a big part of home usage of windows comes from being preinstalled on a lot of laptops. People just switch on their new computer and use it, if the preinstalled os is good enough they don’t search for replacement.
This is consumer device from a well known manufacturer. Before this other similar devices had to use windows, as Valve didn’t have installers for steam os, didn’t supported third party devices.
As the usage of linux grows with this, more (game) developers would choose to also develop for linux or at least make sure their programs run fine with wine.
You absolutely can there’s even a command that allows you to selectively make directories mutable again. Not that you would want to. It’s just arch underneath and you’d be surprised with what people do with SteamOS on steam decks.
You can’t install steamos, as it’s not availble as an iso with an installer. Holo iso is an unoffiial installer for steamos
Installing arch nowadays is not complex at all, there is the command archinstall, so it’s just a meme now. If you are somewhat familiar with computers and linux, and don’t call someone a “haxor” just for using a terminal, it won’t be a big deal.
If they’re going the unofficial route, I would think Bazzite would be the more “safe” recommendation if you were looking to get SteamOS without having what I will only halfheartedly describe as a cludged-together distro (as much as I love the project).
Knowledge can’t hurt, but probably not. Valve seems to be aiming at a OEM experience out of the box, and we don’t know what the installer for desktop would look like. But it would certainly be some kind of install wizard. Arch based distros use stuff like Calamares.
Probably not. SteamOS likely won’t have any particular benefit on desktops over other distros.
Just download an Arch-based distro, like CachyOS or EndeavorOS, install the Steam app through pacman -S or whatever helper app they have for new users, install Proton Plus, and play your games. If you want to get into the weeds of immutable Arch, give blendOS a try.
I recommend, trying all of these in a VM first, btw. You can even practice doing a pure Arch install from scratch that way.
Anyway, SteamOS is almost certainly just a preconfigured Arch + KDE that has Steam and Proton already installed, with downstream patches for specific hardware they’ve deemed worth their time to patch (which will eventually make their way upstream).
What can you do with SteamOS?
It’s mostly just ArchLinux with preinstalled steam, booting into “big picture” ui. You can do the same thing as with any linux distro. Nearly all non competitive games from steam should work ootb.
The important part is a lot of people don’t really care about operating systems, a big part of home usage of windows comes from being preinstalled on a lot of laptops. People just switch on their new computer and use it, if the preinstalled os is good enough they don’t search for replacement. This is consumer device from a well known manufacturer. Before this other similar devices had to use windows, as Valve didn’t have installers for steam os, didn’t supported third party devices.
As the usage of linux grows with this, more (game) developers would choose to also develop for linux or at least make sure their programs run fine with wine.
This sounds awesome! Thank you for taking some time to write this, it was really helpful.
Its nothing like archlinux.
It’s literally based on arch.
It’s an immutable arch variant with KDE plasma and a bunch of pre installed applications.
SteamOS is immutable, so you can’t do everything other distros can
You absolutely can there’s even a command that allows you to selectively make directories mutable again. Not that you would want to. It’s just arch underneath and you’d be surprised with what people do with SteamOS on steam decks.
Ah ok. Thanks for correcting. Pretty new to linux
Would learning how to install arch help me install steamOS?
You can’t install steamos, as it’s not availble as an iso with an installer. Holo iso is an unoffiial installer for steamos
Installing arch nowadays is not complex at all, there is the command
archinstall
, so it’s just a meme now. If you are somewhat familiar with computers and linux, and don’t call someone a “haxor” just for using a terminal, it won’t be a big deal.At the moment. But the whole point of the article is that it’s coming soon.
If they’re going the unofficial route, I would think Bazzite would be the more “safe” recommendation if you were looking to get SteamOS without having what I will only halfheartedly describe as a cludged-together distro (as much as I love the project).
Me happily using Bazzite for ~2 years since it was in beta.
No more tinkering. Just gaming.
Knowledge can’t hurt, but probably not. Valve seems to be aiming at a OEM experience out of the box, and we don’t know what the installer for desktop would look like. But it would certainly be some kind of install wizard. Arch based distros use stuff like Calamares.
Probably not. SteamOS likely won’t have any particular benefit on desktops over other distros.
Just download an Arch-based distro, like CachyOS or EndeavorOS, install the Steam app through
pacman -S
or whatever helper app they have for new users, install Proton Plus, and play your games. If you want to get into the weeds of immutable Arch, give blendOS a try.I recommend, trying all of these in a VM first, btw. You can even practice doing a pure Arch install from scratch that way.
Anyway, SteamOS is almost certainly just a preconfigured Arch + KDE that has Steam and Proton already installed, with downstream patches for specific hardware they’ve deemed worth their time to patch (which will eventually make their way upstream).