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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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I am the owner of GamingOnLinux. After discovering Linux back in the days of Mandrake in 2003, I constantly checked on the progress of Linux until Ubuntu appeared on the scene and it helped me to really love it. You can reach me easily by emailing GamingOnLinux directly.
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31 comments
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I think this feature is really awesome, because you already get automatic marks on achievements. Therefore, for existing games we already have at least some kind way to find important moments.

However, this new interface is not really integrated into the existing Steam library features. There is currently no way to share it to the Steam feed and the advertised sharing into Steam chat also doesn't exist at the moment.

Quoting: pb
Quoting: TharvasI 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.

I just did some calculations and I'd need to be recording (at 12 Mbps) for 16 years non-stop to reach my disk's TBW limit. With my gaming usually limited to 1-2h a day, it gives close to 200 years. I think I can afford to have the background recording written to SSD. ;-)

BTW is it just me, or does changing the recording folder segfault Steam client for everyone?

However, smaller and older SSD also come with a smaller TBW. My 500GiB SSD only has an advertised TBW of 150. So that would only be 1,6 years with the highest setting (24 Mbps) of full time writing, but still with 2h average gaming it would 20 years (considering only game recording).
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