We’re less than one month away from the launch of the Steam Deck, and it looks like players might now find it easier to take more than just their Steam library out on the go.
The main selling point of the handheld PC is its portability — at the expense of performance (compared to a powerful gaming PC), players can enjoy their Steam library no matter where they are. However, PC game libraries aren’t confined to just one platform; what if you want to play all those free Epic Games Store games you’ve collected?
This is where Heroic comes in. It’s an open-source, Linux-compatible game launcher that can boot up Epic Games Store titles. Because the Steam Deck is a Linux-based PC (albeit in a handheld form), Heroic’s Linux compatibility means it should be fairly easy to install on the system.
This means that you won’t need to muck around with trying to install a new operating system on your Steam Deck to run your Epic Games library — and (as noted by Forbes) the new 2.1.0. Heroic update (nicknamed “Rayleigh”) has added several Steam Deck-friendly features.
First up is the newly added support for gamepads. While it’s unlikely the Steam Deck's controllers will be compatible right away, we suspect it won’t take long to make them work in Heroic now that the UI is already compatible with Xbox and PlayStation controllers.
Secondly, the Rayleigh update has added the new Wine Downloader feature; this will allow users to download the latest Wine-GE and Proton-GE versions. The latter is especially interesting for the Proton-reliant Steam Deck
Proton and Wine are both tools used to allow Linux machines to run Windows-compatible programs, and the GE (or GloriousEggroll) versions are community-built versions of these tools. The GE builds are
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