Yeah, native deck support for Game pass would keep me hooked in most likely.
As it stands, it’s a paint getting it to work, or using a windows boot is…well, my controls work one day and explode the next. I had to stop my Persona 5 playthrough which was on my list for years, but I had to drop it because the controls just…stopped working on the deck w/ windows.
I just wanna add gamepass.exe or whatever to steam library and boot it up.
You can do this with GloSC/GloSSI (the latter is a newer rewrite of the same tool). You can add any UWP app (including the Xbox app itself) to Steam with it. When you run the new ‘Xbox’ entry in Steam GloSC/GloSSI will open in the background and launch the associated app, and a virtual controller will be detected, which every game will see as a generic physical Xbox controller. GloSC/GloSSI then translates your Steam input to the virtual controller, avoiding any associated compatibility problems. I would suggest binding the trackpads to a mouse for easy controls, and also configuring Windows to automatically open the on-screen keyboard when typing, sleep on the power button and not show a lock screen on wake so it works just like SteamOS.
It can also create overlays for the Steam Big Picture UI allowing you to create a SteamOS-like experience, but I find it a bit inconsistent so YMMV.
Basically, install GloSC/GloSSI, use the app to add the Xbox app to Steam, and bind your controls for it in Steam to an Xbox controller.
Yeah, native deck support for Game pass would keep me hooked in most likely.
As it stands, it’s a paint getting it to work, or using a windows boot is…well, my controls work one day and explode the next. I had to stop my Persona 5 playthrough which was on my list for years, but I had to drop it because the controls just…stopped working on the deck w/ windows.
I just wanna add gamepass.exe or whatever to steam library and boot it up.
My gamepass is just a steam library icon. The process isn’t too bad.
You can do this with GloSC/GloSSI (the latter is a newer rewrite of the same tool). You can add any UWP app (including the Xbox app itself) to Steam with it. When you run the new ‘Xbox’ entry in Steam GloSC/GloSSI will open in the background and launch the associated app, and a virtual controller will be detected, which every game will see as a generic physical Xbox controller. GloSC/GloSSI then translates your Steam input to the virtual controller, avoiding any associated compatibility problems. I would suggest binding the trackpads to a mouse for easy controls, and also configuring Windows to automatically open the on-screen keyboard when typing, sleep on the power button and not show a lock screen on wake so it works just like SteamOS.
It can also create overlays for the Steam Big Picture UI allowing you to create a SteamOS-like experience, but I find it a bit inconsistent so YMMV.
Basically, install GloSC/GloSSI, use the app to add the Xbox app to Steam, and bind your controls for it in Steam to an Xbox controller.