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Recently, EA starting removing Origin from games on Steam and replacing it with the EA app which as I noted before, caused numerous issues. Now, Valve should have solved it in Proton Experimental.

Some games just didn't work at all with the change, others needed a re-install, some needed a couple of re-loads and so on. It was a big nuisance and quite annoying that EA seemingly didn't work with Valve on it before pushing out such a big change. Anyway, should be all good now.

Here's all that's changed:

  • Fix Edge Webview installer throwing an error when starting Vermintide 2 for the first time.
  • Fix the new EA launcher displaying a blank window.
  • Fix The Anacrusis not displaying video when joining a match (experimental regression).
  • Enable nvapi for: Red Dead Redemption 2, Red Dead Online.

Changelog available here. As a reminder (for desktop), you now need Mesa 22 / Nvidia drivers 510.47 or newer for Proton Experimental. On Steam Deck, Valve control the drivers for you so it's fine.

Need to know how to change the Proton version used? See the below video that goes over the changes and shows you what to do on Steam Deck:

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Text guide (Steam Deck):

  • Pick a game and head to the little COG icon on the right.
  • Click Properties, then Compatibility on the left.
  • Make sure the tickbox is done, then select Proton Experimental from the dropdown.

On a Linux desktop:

  • Right click a game, go to Properties.
  • Compatibility on the left.
  • Make sure the tickbox is done, then select Proton Experimental from the dropdown.
Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
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gradyvuckovic Nov 3, 2022
> On Steam Deck, Valve control the drivers for you so it's fine.

This is partly why I love my Steam Deck.

Valve have shown how committed they are to ensuring things 'just work' on Linux, so having a device from Valve just massively simplifies gaming in a lot of ways. The thing just auto updates, and Valve can ensure the entire OS stack is configured right for best compatibility and performance, so I know I'm getting more or less the best possible gaming experience on Linux that is available. PC gaming on easy mode.
gradyvuckovic Nov 3, 2022
Quoting: melkemind
Quoting: iWeaker4You
Quoting: LanzAmazing that EA quality control allowed it to ship while breaking Proton/Steam Deck.

Because it app is targeted for Windows, not Wine / Proton

And that concerns me a bit because we might always have a moving target with supporting Windows games, especially if Microsoft ever makes a big platform change. I can only hope that, as steam deck numbers continue to rise, more game companies will make supporting Linux a priority, even if it's not their top priority.

I've said it a few times lately and I'll say it again: I'd like to see Valve push this to the next level.

We have Proton, and we have now Steam Deck Compatibility Ratings, and Valve's system for game testing.

And those are great, that's drastically improving the situation for gaming on Linux. It's putting useful information right in the hands of consumers, letting them know which games are working well and which ones aren't before they buy a game. That's leaning consumers towards games which are compatible and away from games which aren't, which is again good from our perspective since it creates a real incentive for game developers to get Verified if they want to see their games advertised as 'Great on Deck'.

That's all well and good, but we still have the major problem of:
Quote"I can buy a game on my Steam Deck that is promoted as 'Great on Deck', that is Verified, works perfectly, then 2 hours later, the publisher can update the game to completely break it, making it impossible to run the game, Valve can reclassify the game as Unsupported, and technically speaking 'this is fine', I do not have valid complaint to make to the publisher or Valve, because the game publisher never supported Linux, or the Steam Deck, officially."

I think the solution might be to add 'Proton' as a 'Platform' on Steam. Alongside Linux, MacOS and Windows. Or grant developers/publishers the option of marking Linux as 'supported' if their Windows game runs great in Proton. But this would come with the requirement for the publishers/developers to acknowledge that if they promote Linux/Proton as a supported platform, they are required to ensure their game runs on Linux natively or via Proton, and if they fail to do so, consumers would be entitled to an automatic refund.

Put the choice in the publishers hands, let them decide if they want to guarantee that compatibility, but if they do, they have to maintain it, otherwise they'll be paying out a lot of refunds.


Last edited by gradyvuckovic on 3 November 2022 at 9:39 pm UTC
Easier solution for regressions: allow people to keep older versions of the game installed or downgrade like GOG does instead of forcing people to update to a possibly non-functioning version. Won't work for multiplayer games, but works for the other ~70% of the games.
Termy Nov 4, 2022
Quoting: adolsonI don't even understand why it's allowed on Steam to have these intermediate launcher things. .

It is allowed because there are enough people dumb enough to still buy it.
This whole fiasko is a perfect example on why a secondary launcher without any purpose should be 100% boycotted.
Secondary launchers like for example from paradox that provide modding functionality are borderline acceptable, everything else should die and burn in hell.

Quoting: KimyrielleEA doesn't care about anything that's not Windows or console. revenue

There, fixed it for you ;)
GeeksOnHugs Nov 9, 2022
Why do game companies continue to generate ill will from their customers who don't want these annoying launchers?

What does it do for them? Has anyone ever bought something off of a third party launcher popping up on a game on Steam? Ever? Maybe I'm wrong, I dunno.
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