Steam Hardware
A place to discuss and support all Steam Hardware, including Steam Deck, Steam Machine, Steam Frame, and SteamOS in general.
As Lemmy doesn't have flairs yet, you can use these prefixes to indicate what type of post you have made, eg:
[Flair] My post title
The following is a list of suggested flairs:
[Deck] - Steam Deck related.
[Machine] - Steam Machine related.
[Frame] - Steam Frame related.
[Discussion] - General discussion.
[Help] - A request for help or support.
[News] - News about the deck.
[PSA] - Sharing important information.
[Game] - News / info about a game on the deck.
[Update] - An update to a previous post.
[Meta] - Discussion about this community.
If your post is only relevant to one hardware device (Deck/Machine/Frame/etc) please specify which one as part of the title or by using a device flair.
These are not enforced, but they are encouraged.
Rules:
- Follow the rules of Sopuli
- Posts must be related to Steam Hardware or Steam OS in an obvious way.
- No piracy, there are other communities for that.
- Discussion of emulators are allowed, but no discussion on how to illegally acquire ROMs.
- This is a place of civil discussion, no trolling.
- Have fun.
view the rest of the comments
different distros have different environments. as in different libraries, versions and ways of accomplishing the same tasks. this is good for the linux ecosystem but bad for developers who want a predictable and stable set of tools they can build upon.
this system addresses just that by providing this stable set of libraries and tools developers can target instead.
eli5 it's basically so your choice of distro doesn't affect game compatibility, and developers don't have to add manual support for every distro a user might want to run.
Ok thanks! Is it related to proton or is it just for native games?
both. they can also work together for windows games to run predictably through proton without the need for distro-specific tweaks.
that's because proton is not an emulator but a translator, so it's interacting directly with the aforementioned system libraries and kernel instead of emulating those.
it's part of how it can be so fast.
Proton runs on SLR.
Apart from what others already replied, a native game can run on SLR.
If it is being run without SLR, that would mean that you are using your distro's system libraries, which you would find in places like
/liband/usr/lib.If it is being run on SLR, then it is using the libraries that Steam downloaded in the location the SLR is installed.