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I have been debating whether to write this up for a while, but here I am. I have completely ditched SteamOS in favour of Ubuntu Mate.

If you follow me on Twitter, you would have probably known this article was coming due to how frustrating an experience it has been for me.

I was spurred on due to the BoilingSteam website writing about it, and they echo some of my own thoughts and frustrations.

Recently I was sat with my son and wanted to play a point & click adventure game called Putt-Putt with him. SteamOS needed to restart to update, so I did and it just flashed into a black screen. We waited quite a long time to see if anything happened but nothing did. After rebooting, the system was completely broken with another black screen.

Oh god #SteamOS what have you done to yourself! pic.twitter.com/tQdzSuPuQs

— LiamLinux (@thenaughtysquid) August 20, 2016

I tried everything I could find to fix it. I trawled through the SteamOS help pages, ran their automated recovery scripts from the terminal and nothing worked, everything just resulted in the same black screen. Their help pages mentioned some recovery option that would reset SteamOS, but that doesn't seem to exist if you do the advanced install method (as I had multiple drives with other things on).

I'm not the only person this has happened to; I've seen quite a number of people have a "fatal error loop" requiring a re-install. That is the sort of thing that is going to put people off and already has in some cases. You can see a bug report here that was closed, but people are still having issues. There's another post here, another here and so on. Quite a few people get issues like this and it's not looking good.

That was the final nail in the coffin for my time with SteamOS. I don't have time to deal with such breakage.

That wasn't the first time SteamOS gave me a black screen. It has actually happened to me 3-4 times now, but this time it just didn't want to come back alive. A lot of hassle for something that's supposed to be console-like and be easier to work with to just load up and go. The whole thing feels like it's still in its infancy.

My PS4 has had problems before, so SteamOS certainly isn't alone in having issues, but the difference here is massive. On the PS4 I was able to boot into some sort of safe mode and essentially re-do the PS4 operating system. All achieved with a controller and without any terminals, no resorting to keyboard commands or anything of the sort.

My other issue is that, honestly, I feel like Valve themselves are doing very little for SteamOS to progress into something. Other than driver updates and security fixes they don't seem to be doing anything with it — not even talking about it anymore. I am hoping they have something planned for the next Steam Dev Days, but I'm not holding out hope for something SteamOS related there.

I feel like SteamOS is still missing even some of the most basic things that makes a console-like box attractive to a wider audience. Things like Netflix, Spotify and other simple but useful things like that. You may not agree with me, but everyone I know that owns a console uses a mixture of those two or both rather a lot.

They also missed an important feature of having a party-like system, where you can gather multiple people into a chat/voice chat easily on SteamOS. Something like that is rather essential for setting up games together. I tried it a couple times with Samsai and other people and the built-in voice chat never worked for any of us.

Hell, I feel Valve really missed the mark by not having any livestreaming options in SteamOS. They still haven't even put their own Broadcasting feature into the Linux desktop client nor the SteamOS build yet.

I later setup Ubuntu Mate and within about half an hour it was running solidly with Steam and everything was dandy. For someone like me with whom Linux is the norm, SteamOS is no better than a normal desktop distribution with Steam installed. Since you can have Steam boot directly into Big Picture mode it does seem a little pointless for me now personally. If Steam breaks on Ubuntu Mate, I can find ways to fix it on the same machine — and it won't take the whole machine with it like it will on SteamOS.

The Steam Controller is by far the most useful thing Valve has done recently. I will still happily play from my sofa on Linux thanks to this wonderful device. Thanks to it, I can stay on my sofa, come out of Steam Big Picture and still navigate to other things I want to do all without having to get closer to my TV with a keyboard and mouse.

I still believe SteamOS has its place though. On pre-built machines of course it is much easier (and likely more attractive to consumers) to have SteamOS sold on it, and it makes a good target for developers who use the line of "there's too many distributions". It has done a lot to help push Linux gaming, that goes without saying, but for me it's just not a good fit.

I don't think Valve plan to drop SteamOS any time soon nor do I think it has been a failure. A great experiment and something that has utterly catapulted Linux gaming to where it is now. If Valve ever do a big update to it, I may return to it to see if it's worth it, but considering the few minor updates it gets this may be a long ways off.

So, there ends my experimenting with SteamOS for now.

My final take on this whole experience is this: SteamOS is built for the people making systems and selling them, not for us in reality, Valve just provide it for us because they can. Valve only really care about the problems on the systems sold with it. So I would personally just steer clear of SteamOS unless you're buying it on a supported system.

How have you found your time with SteamOS? Have you also replaced it with a normal distribution like me? Let me know in the comments.

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 came back to check 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. Find me on Mastodon.
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102 comments
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boltronics Aug 30, 2016
Perhaps Valve is just waiting on AMD to get their free software drivers finished. Once that's done, issues with DKMS and proprietary drivers will be a thing of the past.

AMDGPU+Mesa is nearly there already, both in terms of performance, stability and OpenGL support. Not sure about Vulkan... AMD promised a free software release but no specifics. Also no mention of Crossfire support for OpenGL games. Aside from that, AMD drivers will provide a great out-of-the-box experience with nothing more than a proprietary firmware blob (which hopefully AMD will find a solution for too, eventually). Should make SteamOS much more reliable.
adolson Aug 30, 2016
I haven't used SteamOS in a long, long time. For a short while, I was dual-booting it. But there were games that I tried to play and they would fail because of missing Java, or AIR, or some other dependencies, and SteamOS didn't automatically handle that. It's not very console-like when you have to switch to a desktop and then hope that what you need is in the repos, and when it's not, start hunting around the internet for a solution that works... Back to just using Debian on my TV-PC.

It's unfortunate. I wanted to switch to SteamOS. I kept waiting for the Netflix and YouTube apps. I waited for the DLNA media player. We got a [very limited] music player - great. They've made a lot of good progress with the Big Picture redesign. But it needs so much more work. And that's just the interface - has nothing to do with the underlying OS, really.

From what I read in the subreddit, virtually all of Valve's Linux devs have exited the company, and the few that remain are focused on VR. I think it's safe to say that we're where we don't want to be - on the backburner of the company who has the biggest backburner in the history of backburners.
ProfessorKaos64 Aug 30, 2016
I've had little issue with it. I really enjoy using it. I've only ever had bugs with my legacy BIOS install on my test machine. Even then, it's not enough to deter me.
ProfessorKaos64 Aug 30, 2016
Quoting: operaFortunately SteamOS runs fine on my machine. No issues so far.
But I am not happy with the lack of features like Streaming Services (Youtube, Twitch, Prime, Netflix).

That works in the Steam browser, unless you mean some kind of dedicated application.
Halifax Aug 30, 2016
Lot's-o-hate for SteamOS here, and for valid reasons - the console/living room experience is largely underwhelming compared to real consoles. But as a modded desktop distro that has the best drivers for my i3 Alienware SM, it's the best choice. Plus SteamOS has great support for the sleep/resume feature of the Alienware hardware (as good as any laptop's).

Since I'm not interested in a BPM living room anymore, I just run it as a full-time desktop distro. People say this is stupid, I disagree :-)

Only a few days ago I found this works wonderfully on SteamOS:

$ sudo apt-get install kde-full

Everything still works fine, including sleep/resume - I'm impressed. It also seems to be a faster running KDE experience than the full Debian 8 distro. Probably because less is installed by default, I've just added the packages I want and it all works fine.

I get the whole console thing though, and SteamOS being a disappointment on that count. All true. Luckily, I personally have found far greater value in my SteamOS+Alienware purchase as a lightweight, small, attractive, quiet day-to-day Linux distro that supports sleep/resume to keep my same desktop session running indefinitely.
wolfyrion Aug 30, 2016
pfft... just install a rolling release distro...
I really love rolling release distros thats why I am using Manjaro.
It was either Arch,Antergos or Manjaro. :P

I cant imagine myself working with a non rolling release distro. Once you experienced it you will never go back to ubuntu like distros...

Plasma 5 + Manjaro = Amazing Experience !
boltronics Aug 30, 2016
Quoting: wolfyrionpfft... just install a rolling release distro...
I cant imagine myself working with a non rolling release distro. Once you experienced it you will never go back to ubuntu like distros...

I used to be a massive fan of Gentoo. Even ran GentooX on the original Xbox back in the day. These days I just run Debian and have started to use GuixSD, although I am thinking of toying with Parabola also since I backed the EOMA68.
Halifax Aug 30, 2016
Quoting: wolfyrionpfft... just install a rolling release distro...
I really love rolling release distros thats why I am using Manjaro.
It was either Arch,Antergos or Manjaro. :P

I cant imagine myself working with a non rolling release distro. Once you experienced it you will never go back to ubuntu like distros...

Plasma 5 + Manjaro = Amazing Experience !

That's the cool thing about Linux, there are many great distros, to match many prefs :)
For me personally, Debian 8 Jessie w/ KDE has become my favorite for a while now. Bleeding edge packages for all the desktop stuff turns out to be very low on my priorities. As long as I get a recent nVidia driver, I'm good (which SteamOS has).

What turns out to be way higher on my priorities is a solid stable distro like Debian that's all around fantastic, and doesn't have the major downside of... Not being Debian ;)

No matter what cool Linux project I come across on the Web, I know for sure they'll have a Debian installer option, other flavors maybe second - or compile yourself. Which I've done, but it can be a pain sometimes.


Last edited by Halifax on 30 August 2016 at 6:30 am UTC
wvstolzing Aug 30, 2016
openSUSE Tumbleweed is my favorite rolling distro.
*Way* more reliable than Arch in my experience; nothing arbitrarily breaks every two days.
liju Aug 30, 2016
Quoting: Pangachat(thanks god Victor Vran local coop incoming :D ).
Do You maybe have any more info on this? I was one of the ppl requesting local coop from devs and I know they have several times stated they are working on it, but it was soo long ago. No new info so far so I guessed they just resign from local coop for this game..
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