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Another big upgrade for Steam desktop and Steam Deck fans, with Game Recording now in Beta allowing you to easily clip your favourite moments with no external apps needed. Valve said this system is Steam Deck Verified and fully functional there too!

This will work across two modes:

  • Background Recording - always active when in-game, with you being able to set the limits on it.
  • On Demand - recording from when you tap a key.

That's not all. It's an entire system for developers to hook into for their games as well. When you're recording, you get a special timeline that appears. Developers can hook into this, to show event markers on this. Overall, it sounds pretty awesome.

It even makes sharing the clips relatively simple too with you being able to send it to different devices, like from a Steam Deck to desktop PC.

What we're getting is only the start, since this is in Beta. Valve said to expect more "upcoming features, including individualized game settings (coming soon)". And with this, they've also redesigned the Screenshots interface in Steam to include Recordings now too.

Here's a quick clip I recorded directly via Steam on my Kubuntu Linux desktop (game is Rack and Slay):

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As you can see, all fine! That was on the default 12Mbps High setting.

The export function at least on Kubuntu seems broken, as it tries to open a file instead of saving the file. So for now you can make a temporary share link instead, and download it from that. Update 27/06/24: this is solved in a new update.

And a clip recorded from my Steam Deck LCD 512GB, which I then used the built-in feature to send it to my desktop and upload (game is Brotato):

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This was again on the default of 12Mbps High setting.

From the brief test there across the two systems, it's really useful and works very nicely. This is a feature many have been asking for and Valve delivered. Even editing the clips directly on a Steam Deck is stupidly easy to do. I'm seriously impressed by this.


Pictured - me editing the Brotato video clip included above, directly on Steam Deck.

See more on the Game Recordings Beta page. And the Beta Changelog.

Additionally, on Steam Deck in the Beta update, Valve noted "Client and OS beta settings been updated to include a new "Preview" build of SteamOS when available for testing".

Finally there's a new Steamworks SDK update to go with it.

Valve are once again clearly showing why they earn my monies.

Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
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31 comments
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pb Jun 26
Yes, finally! Thanks, Gabe! So many times I wished I had some background recording after witnessing a weird or funny moment in the game, but not enough to warrant setting up constant recording with OBS or some other tools that came and went in the meanwhile. Hopefully this one will work nicely with wayland (it must).
Viesta2015 Jun 26
Yes, finally! Thanks, Gabe! So many times I wished I had some background recording after witnessing a weird or funny moment in the game, but not enough to warrant setting up constant recording with OBS or some other tools that came and went in the meanwhile. Hopefully this one will work nicely with wayland (it must).

This seems like such a perfect moderation/bug reporting tool...
Tharvas Jun 26
I hope there is an option to have the cached data in RAM if plenty to spare to not wear down and degrade the SSD too fast and only with the hotkey pressed the clip will be written to disk.
Exidan Jun 26
is 720p the max resolution of the rocording?
hengecobdig Jun 26
I hope there is an option to have the cached data in RAM if plenty to spare to not wear down and degrade the SSD too fast and only with the hotkey pressed the clip will be written to disk.
+1 to this. With that said, you could set up the recording directory to be in a tmpfs.
this is awesome! i won't have use ubuntu's built-in recorder anymore!
sonic2kk Jun 26
Unfortunately this is not usable on the Linux Desktop, at least on Arch with Plasma 6.1, as the Steam Overlay does not work.

EDIT: Running Steam from the commandline does allow the Steam Overlay to function again. But the Game Recording Timeline has issues interacting with the UI (depending on the display it is on, only certain sections can be interacted with). Both of these issues have already been reported upstream at ValveSoftware/steam-for-linux.


Last edited by sonic2kk on 26 June 2024 at 9:27 pm UTC
YASSSSSSSS!~
I've been saying for YEARS that they need to add this! It makes too much sense, they already had all the pieces in the software, like video capture, video encoding, taking screenshots, overlay etc. It was such a small leap to make, to go from that to video recording.

It's going to make recording stuff from games so much easier.
trev0r Jun 26
super useful for me as a deck user
Oooh, nice! The game Noita comes with a built-in clip capturing ability (as GIFs), and I've used that many a time to capture its chaotic hilarity. I'd love to have that ability easily available in any game (I know other solutions exist, but I'm lazy ).

Also, Valve, this shows you know how to record video with sound on Linux, so you have no excuse for Steam's game streaming feature only working on Windows anymore!
sarmad Jun 26
Great. Thanks, Valve. Time to spam my friends with my CS2 kills :)
sarmad Jun 26
@liamd, did you notice any impact to performance when recording is enabled?
bisbyx Jun 27
Would be nice if there was a way to disable it per game. I dont need this on for games like Cookie Clicker, but I do want it on for games like Elden Ring, For recordings, I find it important to be able to capture retroactively, so the "keep running always" is the only useful method, but I don't want it always running for every game.

Also, it seems to only be able to capture full desktop audio atm, so my recordings all have random snippets of shows in the background. There's a space for changing the audio device but it won't let me change it atm.

Overall, seems promising, and has a nice interface, but its still a beta. I look forward to what it becomes.
Pengling Jun 27
Oh this is damn good - it reminds me of the same feature on the Nintendo Switch, though the Steam equivalent is more featureful. Hopefully the clip-on-keypress mode will behave like the aforementioned Switch one, which captures and saves the previous ten seconds or so of gameplay when you press the button; It won't be anywhere near as useful if it only records from the moment it was pressed!

Valve are once again clearly showing why they earn my monies.
I like that they actually invest their cut into features - and ones that I actually use, at that.


Last edited by Pengling on 27 June 2024 at 4:36 am UTC
Phlebiac Jun 27
it tries to open a file instead of saving the file.

Sounds like they have fixed that:
(Linux) Fixed export clip dialog not allowing saving.
Uh nice! Does someone happen to know if it uses proper HW acceleration across GPU vendors and drivers or does it run in software?


Last edited by Vortex_Acherontic on 27 June 2024 at 6:47 am UTC
Chrisznix Jun 27
Very nice!
How do they handle the sound? Can you say which audio source they record or is it the main audio sink (on the desktop)?
I would like to record game audio without me and my friends talking trash on mumble... :)
Arehandoro Jun 27
Maybe, one of these days, I start recording content and make video-walkthroughs 😅
Unfortunately this is not usable on the Linux Desktop, at least on Arch with Plasma 6.1, as the Steam Overlay does not work.

EDIT: Running Steam from the commandline does allow the Steam Overlay to function again. But the Game Recording Timeline has issues interacting with the UI (depending on the display it is on, only certain sections can be interacted with). Both of these issues have already been reported upstream at ValveSoftware/steam-for-linux.
I'm assuming maybe this is game specific. I tried it with cs2 on arch with plasma 6.1 and it works fine. My gripe is that it has no options for recording of audio devices. It is greyed out and says system audio.
officernice Jun 27
Yet another reason why Steam is #1, and I will NEVER have an account on the abysmal Epic Store. Steam provides a great services and they continue to broaden features.
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