Skip Navigation

Lists of useful tools, software, mods, websites and other resources

These are lists of some tools and software that are useful for Steam Deck and can enhance your experience with it, as well as all the websites and other such Steam Deck resources I know.

I made these lists for the wiki on Reddit's SteamDeck sub and I thought it was a pretty useful to keep around. I wanted to dump them here for everybody to preserve them and to maybe find a new home for this Steam Deck resource.

Let me know what you think.

List of tools and homebrew

Below is a list of tools and homebrew that can enhance your experience with the Steam Deck. Since the Steam Deck offers most things that a normal Linux desktop environment can, tools are included that can be found in the Discover store (including from non-default repositories) and have proven to be an especially good fit.

Emulation and non-steam games

  • BCML Installer for Steam Deck BCML (a modding tool voor Breath of the Wild for WiiU) can be difficult to get running on Steam Deck, because it uses an immutable filesystem and the version of Python installed by default is higher than what BCML supports. This script helps people install it.
  • BoilR Add non-steam games to your steam library.
  • Emudeck This script automates downloading, installing and setting up a large list of different emulators.
  • EmulationStation DE A graphical and themeable emulator front-end that allows you to access all your favorite games in one place, which is installed by Emudeck and Retrodeck, but can also be used by itself.
  • Mod Organizer 2 Linux Installer This project aims to make modding and playing Bethesda games on Linux as easy as possible. It does that by providing installers which automatically setup a working experience for the user.
  • Retrodeck A flatpak application containing a large list of different emulators.
  • SGDBoop A tool that automatically applies assets from SteamGridDB directly to your Steam library, removing the need to download and set them manually.
  • Steam ROM Manager Steam ROM Manager is a super flexible tool for adding non-Steam games to steam in bulk and managing their artwork assets. It can be installed with Emudeck, but can also be used by itself.

File management

  • Deck Drive Manager Copy Steam Games From Your PC to Your Steam Deck SD Card.
  • Disk Usage Analyzer A tool for managing your used and free space.
  • Firelight Filelight is an application to visualize the disk usage on your computer by showing folders using an easy-to-understand view of concentric rings. Filelight makes it simple to free up space!
  • gdu If you prefer the command-line, gdu is a fast disk usage analyzer with console interface, written in Go.
  • Shortix A script that creates human readable symlinks for Proton game prefixes. Reddit release post
  • Steam Deck Shader Cache Killer Script to Purge The Steam Decks Shader Cache/ Compat Data. Reddit release post

File transfer and synchronization

  • Deck Screenshot Sync A work-in-progress auto-uploader for screenshots made from the Deck onto your PC or phone. Reddit post by u/ Xinerki.
  • MEGASync Easy automated syncing between your computers and your MEGA Cloud Drive.
  • OpenCloudSaves Open Cloud Saves is an open source application for managing your saves games across Windows, MacOs, and Linux (including SteamOS).
  • Syncthing Syncthing is a file synchronization tool like Dropbox, except that it can work with your own machines and without a server. This can be very useful for keeping non-Steam and emulator save games in sync or backed up.
  • Warpinator Send and Receive Files across the Network

Launchers

  • Alfea Alfae is an experimental project to launch GOG/Local/ItchIo/Epic/Bottles Games in an organised fashion. Also can add games to deck UI.
  • Bottles Runs Windows software on Linux with Bottles.
  • Heroic Game Launcher Heroic is an Open Source Games Launcher. Right now it supports launching games from the Epic Games Store using Legendary and GOG Games using our custom implementation with gogdl.
  • Lutris Lutris is a video game preservation platform aiming to keep your video game collection up and running for the years to come.
  • NonSteamLaunchers Installs the latest GE-Proton and several non-Steam launchers under one Proton prefix folder and adds them to your Steam library. Reddit release post for v2.7
  • Steam Tinker Launch Steam Tinker Launch is a versatile Linux wrapper tool for use with the Steam client which allows for easy graphical configuration of game tools, such as GameScope, MangoHud, modding tools and a bunch more. It supports both games using Proton and native Linux games, and works on both X11 and Wayland.

Plugins and mods

Remote access and game streaming

  • AnyDesk AnyDesk allows you to connect to your Steam Deck desktop remotely, like TeamViewer.
  • Barrier Share mouse and keyboard over the local network.
  • Chiaki4deck Chiaki4deck is a fork of Chiaki, adding features for the Steam Deck. It is a free and Open Source Client for PlayStation 4 and PlayStation 5 Remote Play. It can be used to play in real time on a PlayStation as long as there is a network connection.
  • Deskreen Turn any device into a secondary screen for your computer. Streams your Steam Deck screen to a browser on another machine.
  • KDE Connect Enables communication between all your devices.
  • Moonlight Moonlight allows you to play your PC games on almost any device, whether you're in another room or miles away from your gaming rig.
  • NoMachine Like AnyDesk, allows remote desktop connections to your Steam Deck. Disabling read-only on the filesystem is required to install, but otherwise works very well.
  • Remote Mouse Use your phone as a keyboard and mouse, and copy/paste between devices (apps for iOS and for Android available.) Gained improved support for Linux and Steam Deck in December 2022.
  • Rustdesk An open source TeamViewer alternative, remote desktop software. Works out of the box, no configuration required. Use the AppImage from the nightly build.
  • Steam Link Connect your Steam Deck or other Steam devices with each other for remote streaming.
  • Sunshine Sunshine is a self-hosted game stream host for Moonlight, offering low latency, cloud gaming server capabilities.
  • Unified Remote Remote control app for your Steam Deck. Turn your smartphone into a universal remote control, control mouse, keyboard and more.

Other tools

  • Boot Video Randomizer Replace the Deck startup video file with a file of the user's choice. Randomizer provides two features: individual random set and on-boot randomization. Reddit release post
  • CoreKeyboard CoreKeyboard is an X11-based virtual keyboard. It has the advantage over Valve's built-in keyboard to offer access to special keys such as Ctrl, Alt and function keys.
  • Great on Deck browser extension for Chrome or Firefox See what games are verified for the Steam Deck and which medal they have on ProtonDB in the Steam store.
  • Ludusavi Backup tool for PC game saves. Here is the Reddit release post.
  • ProtonUp-Qt Install and manage Wine- and Proton-based compatibility tools for Steam and Lutris with this graphical user interface.
  • Qbert Qbert generates a root overlay where you can install whatever software you need without messing your filesystem. NOTICE: something is broken atm, Qbert is not creating a correct overlay so basically the software is not working as intended.
  • SC Controller User-mode driver, mapper and GTK3 based GUI for Steam Controller, DS4 and similar controllers. Steam Deck support added in version 0.4.8.8.
  • Steam Deck SD Card Scanner An application to help you keep track of the different games you have on your SD Cards. If you ever found yourself wondering if you already have a game installed on a different SD Card then this is for you. Reddit post by u/ddotthomas.
  • Steam Deck Utilities by CryoByte33 Scripts and utilities to enhance the Steam Deck experience, particularly performance.
  • Steam Shortcut Editor Allows you to modify the shortcuts file quickly and set game name to be the appid, so you have access to community controls. Link to Reddit post
  • Vibrant Deck CLI A simple command line utility to tweak the screen saturation of the Steam Deck.

List of Steam Deck-related websites

Here is a collection of websites that offer information, guides and news about the Steam Deck.

Official Valve sites

Linux and Steam Deck gaming sites

  • ProtonDB Crowdsourced Linux and Steam Deck game compatibility reports.
  • GamingOnLinux GamingOnLinux deals with games on Linux (which the Steam Deck runs) in general, but has consistently reported on Steam Deck-related news.
  • Linux Gaming Central Linux Gaming Central is dedicated to giving you news on the Linux gaming front. The link above points to the "Steam Deck" tag on the site.
  • Boiling Steam Boiling Steam is dedicated to covering the world of PC Linux Gaming since 2014. The site often reports on the Steam Deck, as the search results the link points to show.
  • Are We Anti-Cheat Yet? A comprehensive and crowd-sourced list of games using anti-cheats and their compatibility with GNU/Linux or Wine/Proton.

Steam Deck community sites

  • Steam Deck Community An independent Steam Deck Forum.
  • Steam Deck Life A Steam Deck blog for the latest news, tips and tricks and more.
  • Steam Deck HQ A web site with game reviews with optimal configuration, tips and guides, and news.
  • ShareDeck An unofficial site to find and share Steam Deck performance configurations.
  • overkill.wtf overkill.wtf primarily focuses on the Steam Deck, with a hint of Switch, PC gaming and whatever else we find interesting at that moment--but mostly Steam Deck.
  • Great on Deck Unofficial Steam Deck compatibility website. Verification, performance reviews and tweaks for Steam Deck. Emulation guides, Epic Games Store, Ubisoft Connect games and more.
  • CheckMyDeck Check Steam Deck compatibility of your Steam library.
  • sdeck.wiki A list of Steam Deck resources.
  • Steam Deck Guide A guide covering Steam Deck, including the applications and tools that will make you better and more efficient with your Steam Deck device.
  • Steam Deck Repo A website where you can upload and share community-made Steam Deck boot videos (plus in the future, other things like themes and an app to automatically apply them to the Steam Deck)!
  • Steam Deck Linux Wiki This wiki aims to be a useful resource for those that want to explore the desktop side of the Steam Deck.
  • Steam Deck Guide This guide contains all kinds of useful tips that were found online. Hopefully it will help you use your Steam Deck to the fullest.

List of Steam Deck-related subreddits and Lemmy communities

These other places covering the Steam Deck also exist on sites like Reddit and Lemmy:

-

-

  • r/SteamDeck
  • r/DeckSupport
  • r/steamdeck_linux
  • r/SteamDeckBootVids
  • r/SteamDeckEmulation
  • r/SteamDeckGames
  • r/SteamDeckModded
  • r/SteamDeckMods
  • r/SteamDeckTech
  • r/SteamDeckTinker
  • r/SteamDeckTricks
  • r/SteamDeckWins
  • r/SteamDeckYuzu
  • r/SteamOS
  • r/WindowsOnDeck
  • r/BestOfSteamDeck
  • r/linux_gaming

List of Steam Deck-related podcasts

If you enjoy listening to Steam Deck news in your car or elsewhere, these podcasts might be for you:

List of Steam Deck-related Discord servers

Get together and discuss the Steam Deck on these Discord servers:

  • Steam Deck Discord The main Steam Deck Discord, not affiliated with Valve, Valve employees are known to lurk on the Discord.
  • Steam Deck Homebrew Steam Deck Homebrew Discord server, with, among others, a channel for Decky support.
66 comments
  • https://swethatanamala.substack.com/p/how-i-ran-llms-on-steam-deck-handheld

    I am going to probably make a post/video about using the setup Swetha lays out in this article after I have fiddled around with this setup to have enough good advice to collect into a post, but it is worth linking to this awesome guide here as well on how to run a LLM/AI locally on your steam deck (meaning an internet connection is not needed and no data leaves your device period). There are a million ways to do this but what is so clever about Swetha's is that because the whole setup is contained within a distrobox ubuntu instance that lives in your home directory, updates to your Steam Deck won't break everything (Steam-os is an immutable operating system which can cause headaches with having to re-setup things after every update).

    Also because this method relies on using a llama.cpp through a terminal, there is no reason this workflow couldn't be done with a terminal program open in Gaming Mode on the Steam Deck (or through Decky Terminal, but I can't figure out how to easily paste text in and out of it ughh).

    Edit you can also just install jan from here as an app image https://jan.ai/ and load in .gguf files you download from huggingface.co

    Swetha recommends getting a model that is less than 4 gigabytes and loading it into the GPU, but I haven't found a >4 gig model that actually gives that useful information yet. I have had success with running these models on the CPU

    https://huggingface.co/TheBloke/Mistral-7B-Instruct-v0.1-GGUF

    In particular I found the sweet spot to be these specific models:

    mistral-7b-instruct-v0.1.Q5_K_S.gguf Q5_K_S

    mistral-7b-instruct-v0.1.Q5_K_M.gguf Q5_K_M

    This one runs too slow on the CPU to be useful at least with the settings I am currently using:

    mistral-7b-instruct-v0.1.Q6_K.gguf Q6_K

    I like the handy chart that comes along with this release of mistral models as it gives you a good starting point from which to figure out generally what size model is practical and optimal for your computer.

    This reddit thread had some good general information on how to download AI models from hugginface.co and run them

    https://www.reddit.com/r/LocalLLaMA/comments/18hzun0/sharing_a_simple_local_llm_setup/

    Specifically this quote from that reddit thread is useful


    Steps:

    Install llama.cpp, the steps are detailed in the repo.

    Download an LLM from huggingface.

    For those not familiar with this step, look for anything that has GGUFin its name. You will probably find that on TheBloke's page. If you are not sure which one to choose, start with one that has lots of likes or downloads, or browse this community for impressions and feedback. Once you find the model you like, go to its page, click on Files and versions` and then choose a file that ends with .gguf and download it. If you are not familiar with the sizes, go for Q4_K_M and make sure the size of the file seems to be something that can fit in your GPU or CPU memory.

  • Fantastic list! I’m gonna try out SyncThing this weekend 👍🏻

    • SyncThing is great. I have it on all my computers and a VPS. At least two clients need to be online for them to be able to transfer data, of course, so that VPS comes in handy. Something like a Raspberry Pi would work.

      I sync all my emulator save games with it, for instance.

      • That was actually pretty easy to setup.

        I installed SyncThing on my Windows PC using https://github.com/Bill-Stewart/SyncthingWindowsSetup and set it up to monitor a folder which contains the non-Steam games I want to sync to my SteamDeck.

        On the SteamDeck, in Desktop mode, I installed the SyncThingy app via the package manager and followed the instructions to set it up as a service that starts at boot time, so it will even work in Gaming mode.

        Once that was running, I went through the process in SyncThing to synchronize my PC and the Steam Deck, which does take a few clicks and confirmations on both the PC and the Steam Deck, but after that it just started copying the game folders automatically.

        After a game had sync'd to the Steam Deck, I added it to Steam, switched back to Gaming mode and played it for a bit. After saving my game, I checked on the PC to see that the save files that added to the game folder on my Steam Deck also now showed up on my PC.

      • SyncThing is hands down my favorite software ever.

        People often recommend shit like Nextcloud for personal file hosting where you need to set up a server and have everything connect to that. There is no central server in SyncThing (unless you manually set up the syncing rules to create something like that).

        Not only is setting up SyncThing stupidly easy because you don’t have to setup a server (it is so easy it has a damn QR code reader button, if your device has a camera you can have one device show a QR code and the other scan it and boom they are connected that’s it), it also means you don’t have to maintain a server as a central nexus point indefinitely. You can add and remove devices from sharing a folder in any way you want. The original device that shared the folder can be long gone and it is no problem. I don’t know if people intuitively grasp how much easier that makes retaining important file folders longterm, especially if you are disorganized, chaotic and prone to losing, destroying or not properly maintaining things like I am lol.

        A raspberry pi works great as a SyncThing device that you can leave always on to catch your other devices when they connect to the internet briefly and sync their folders, but if the folder is small enough and your phone has the space, your phone works even better. SyncThing works on both Android and iOS (with the paid app mobiussync).

        Honestly SyncThing is a stunning piece of software, the kind that actually legitimately changes your life when you get used to using it, and thank god it isn’t locked into some corporations silo to only work with that companies products.

        As a pro tip, this kind of file sharing between devices that may not both happen to be online at the same time for long periods can create issues where both devices have an updated version of a file from when they last connected (which is one of the reasons that having an always on device like a raspberry pi or phone is nice). This is a potentially a hard problem, but SyncThing handles this great with a sync conflict resolving utility where you are prompted what to do for each sync conflict.

        Something I recommend to further mitigate potential issues is for folders with a relatively small amount of files, go into the folder options and set it so SyncThing keeps the last 10 or so versions of a file (if it’s all small files go crazy and do 20 who cares). That way if you do make a huge mistake and lose a critical updated file you can just grab it from the backups. The amount of previous versions of files SyncThing keeps is set per folder on each device separately, so when sharing a folder, your device with a huge amount of storage can be set to retain many older versions of files and your smartphone with little available storage can be set not to retain any or very few.

  • I would like to suggest a perhaps oddball steam deck utility here.

    logseq!

    logseq is a note taking, thinking and task tracking tool, it is open source and free and works superb on the steam deck when launched in gaming mode.

    https://logseq.com/

    logseq has functionality for

    -arbitrarily deep trees of headings

    -easy linking between pages (think wikipedia)

    -calendar and in depth task tracking and scheduling

    -whiteboard simple visualization utility that can link back to notes

    -ability to reference specific parts of a pdf or image from notes and link directly to it

    You can then use the equally superb and also free and open source file sync software Syncthing to sync your logseq notes between different devices (say your phone and steam deck).

    https://syncthing.net/

    Using these two utilities you can easily build a cloud based task tracking and note taking system that has ZERO percent lock-in to any corporate silo or any subscriptions, you have complete agency over the whole thing and its pretty damn slick too!

    Logseq notes are stored as plain text markdown which adds an extra layer of comfort in knowing if you take a bunch of notes on your games even if ALL development of logseq somehow went belly up those notes are stored in plain text markdown... so you arent going to lose them/have to rewrite them by hand.

    (your notes being stored in plain text also means that even a comical amount of notes takes up only kbs of disk space)

  • Decky was quite easy to install and the Vibrant plugin improved quite a lot the visuals.

66 comments