Here we are, another big release on Steam and sadly it's just seemingly not a good experience from my early testing. Even though it seemed like we might see good support, the result is nothing of the sort.
Starting with the big nuisance: even though you've just downloaded it, you won't be ready to play. It will take around an hour to build the shaders on the main menu, something you'll need to do, otherwise you're likely to see worse performance. In my testing, you definitely want to wait on that being done too. Before it was done the performance was far more erratic and it ended up slowing down to a 1FPS crawl during one attempt.
Apart from that, it has the same issue some other bigger games have where the RAM will fill up to around 14/14.1GB as noted on the Steam Deck's performance HUD and then crash completely, often taking the Steam Deck with it for a full reboot.
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Valve did give it a special Proton Hotfix, which doesn't seem to have done enough to make it properly playable or be something I can recommend at this time.
As for how it runs on desktop Linux? On my Ryzen 7 5800X and NVIDIA 2080 Ti (Fedora KDE), it gives an out of date driver warning that can be ignored to begin with. Then it took a good 30 minutes (almost to the dot) to do the shaders even with this clearly much more powerful system. When you only have a 2 hour refund window on Steam, that's not good. Now think about people who do genuinely swap between PC and Steam Deck, practically the entire refund window gone to see if you have issues with it.
For desktop though, you can of course get much better performance and at least on the Linux side, it actually seems to run reasonably well even at 2560x1440 with FSR set to Balanced it can mostly stick around 60FPS.
Both shots were actually 60FPS, but Plasma screenshot spikes the FPS down.
Seems it's quite a problematic port overall, as the Steam user reviews instantly went down to Mixed (Edit: and now "Mostly Negative"), with many people on Windows reporting problematic performance and constant crashes.
You can buy it on Humble Store and Steam.
It will take around an hour to build the shaders on the main menuWow.
with many people on Windows reporting problematic performance and constant crashes.When was the last big release where everything worked on release? You spend more money and are rewarded with a miserable experience.
Edit: According to several reviews the German version features a wrong translation for building shaders, i.e. in the sense of house shaders.
Last edited by Klaas on 28 March 2023 at 8:27 pm UTC
It runs very well on my RX 6700 XT, however it only detects 8GB of VRAM (the GPU has 12GB) and that leads to slowdowns and texture pop-ins. I already applied a "workaround" (switched from Ultra to "only" high) but it should be fixed either by game devs or in Proton. I saw people with RX 6600s saying that in their case, only 4GB is detected.
So it is a issue across the PC space then, I was thinking it was only a deck prolem.
It runs very well on my RX 6700 XT, however it only detects 8GB of VRAM (the GPU has 12GB) and that leads to slowdowns and texture pop-ins.AMD RX 6900 XT also shows 8GB of VRAM (and the mentioned out of date driver warning that can be ignored). The 70 FPS average seem a bit low, so gonna compare these issues with Windows 11.
Last edited by StalePopcorn on 28 March 2023 at 11:39 pm UTC
Edit: According to several reviews the German version features a wrong translation for building shaders, i.e. in the sense of house shaders.That is thoroughly brilliant in its wonkiness! Obligatory link;
I once did a translation about a space ship simulator - in this context space is translated as ruimte (space as in universe). The client copied and pasted the word ruimte to a message popping up every 3 seconds, instructing the user to press SPACE (as in space bar) to jump, without consulting me beforehand. The result was that the user was instructed to press the universe every so many seconds. The end result, reminiscent of Zero Wing (All Your Base Are Belong To Us), was run into the ground by all review sites.
Last edited by Pengling on 29 March 2023 at 12:57 am UTC
It will take around an hour to build the shaders on the main menuWow.
with many people on Windows reporting problematic performance and constant crashes.When was the last big release where everything worked on release? You spend more money and are rewarded with a miserable experience.
Edit: According to several reviews the German version features a wrong translation for building shaders, i.e. in the sense of house shaders.
Resident Evil 4? Is it perfect? Probably not but why is that the bar? It's very similar to the Last of Us, many people are no doubt choosing between the two, and its reviews are overwhelmingly positive a week after release, very few technical complaints.
Relative to its peers, this seems exceptionally bad, Exceptions are newsworthy.
AMD RX 6900 XT also shows 8GB of VRAM (and the mentioned out of date driver warning that can be ignored). The 70 FPS average seem a bit low, so gonna compare these issues with Windows 11.Arch Linux:
+ Compiling shaders faster than Windows
+ Shorter loading times than Windows
- Shows only 8 VRAM in settings
- FPS 10 frames less than Windows
Windows 11:
+ Shows all 16 VRAM in settings
+ FPS 10 frames higher than Linux
- Compiling shaders way slower than Linux
- Longer loading times than Linux
Guess Linux and Windows score 2 versus 2. I even got the same out of date driver warning on Windows, so needed to update my one month old driver. My choice will be a Linux playthrough, obviously.
That is thoroughly brilliant in its wonkiness!The original Star Craft had the same issue: Carrier house Interceptor. Same on regular buildings, but not that obvious – but why should it say house only when something is being built!?
When was the last big release where everything worked on release? You spend more money and are rewarded with a miserable experience.
I would say the Resident Evil 4 remake is a perfect release. That game has amazing performance and, as far as I could tell, no bugs or other game breaking issues.
But that remake is a exception these day's. The default release method of most game developers is launching a broken mess and then we have to wait and hope for it to get fixed.
Last edited by Sojiro84 on 29 March 2023 at 6:47 am UTC
I would say the Resident Evil 4 remake is a perfect release. That game has amazing performance and, as far as I could tell, no bugs or other game breaking issues.
Really? I couldn't even get to the settings menu without RE4 hard hanging my deck.
I would like to buy it day one, but finally, after reading comments here and elsewhere, I will wait until they optimized the game.
I don't want to buy a game full price that is not optimized and buggy, PC gamers deserve as respect as console gamers.
Last edited by legluondunet on 29 March 2023 at 1:55 pm UTC
Once again, a console game that are badly ported on PC.I agree. I was waiting for this game also and was going to buy it on release if it worked with Linux.
I would like to buy it day one, but finally, after reading comments here and elsewhere, I will wait until they optimized the game.
I don't want to buy a game full price that is not optimized and buggy, PC gamers deserve as respect as console gamers.
Well.. it works with Linux. Terribly. But it also works terribly on Windows apparently, so that's fair.
In any case. I'll wait.
it has the same issue some other bigger games have where the RAM will fill up to around 14/14.1GB
Sounds like something that would potentially be fixed by that RADV RAM usage bug.
As far as shader compilation in concerned, isn't that something normally taken care of automatically on the Steam Deck due to Valve pre-compiling those specifically for Steam Deck users? Surprised that isn't currently another download.
Hopefully it's just short term fresh port issues that they can resolve soon.
As far as shader compilation in concerned, isn't that something normally taken care of automatically on the Steam Deck due to Valve pre-compiling those specifically for Steam Deck users?Do they really compile them centrally? AFAIK the files that are shared are generated on the users' systems.
Valve will, upon request via help.steampowered.com, issue a refund for any title that is requested within 14 days of purchase and has been played for less than 2 hours. Even if you fall outside of the refund rules we've described, you can submit a request and we'll take a look at it.
Last edited by Grogan on 29 March 2023 at 5:24 pm UTC
When was the last big release where everything worked on release? You spend more money and are rewarded with a miserable experience.
I wonder if this is why retro gaming has become so big. Things just work and are mostly without bugs, even then the glitches/bugs are often funny. Ohh and you can game in 4k on an old PC still
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