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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: November 1st, 2023

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  • Well, I thought that issue was fixed because I haven’t had a crash in ages. But it’s possible that it’s a mix of not being as bad as it used to be, plus my work-around from way back still being in place.

    So of course, you know that the game crashes when the memory leak eventually fills up the memory and you run out.

    But a long time ago, when it was so bad that it would crash in 10 minutes, I did a work around which involved simply increasing the swap size to 64 GB (or 32GB… i forget, whichever was the max selection in cryoutils). This way, my usually sessions (1-2 hours) would be shorter than it would take the game to run out of memory with that swap size.

    Like another commenter said, the UbiConnect client is the culprit. And turning off the in-game overlay by opening it in desktopmode and changing the settings would help. Also be sure to use Proton Experimental or Proton Hotfix as your selected Compatibility layer.

    I have both the UbiSoft Connect version and the Steam version installed, and both work fine for me these days.


  • The whole OS seems so damn thought through

    Go to the file explorer, open a directory; let’s say the "home
    directory. Make the size column visible. What’s this? It says how many items are in it. Now sort by size. What? It’s sorting by how many ITEMS are in the directory, not the actual storage size of the contents?

    Remember:

    The whole OS seems so damn thought through

    Now try saying that again…

    It’s a robust and customizable OS, yes. But there are ton of things that are counter-intuitive, or require more than the average casual computer user should need to do. I can use it, but I wouldn’t give a non-techy family member that OS to use.





    • GIMP Image Editor comes in handy. The key-binds are clunky AF tho to my photoshop-brain; still getting used to it. But it’s nice to be able to do some quick edits of images/screenshots etc before posting or using.
    • Spotify. Nice to have music playing in the background while playing games. There is a Decky Loader plugin that will let you control it via the Quick Access Menu.
    • Discord. Handy for community oriented games etc. Or just group chat in or outside of games.
    • Google Chrome, Web Browser; typing this in Chrome on the Deck right now…
    • Transmission, File transfer/download client.
    • Kodi, for any media files or watching movies, and also handy for playing Decky Recorder clips back.

    Have to repost this because apparently the ridiculous auto-prune bot flags/removes mentions of a valid file transfer protocol.



  • I know I’ll likely never purchase a headless console (ie. one that NEEDS a seperate display) ever again lol; and being locked into their closed eco systems and platform tax is good riddance.

    And won’t buy a laptop again for a long time unless it’s for something work-related.

    Carrying around my Steam Deck in a casual sling-bag is all I need with me; for gaming or general computer use. And when I am at home, using a USB-C hub to my TV/Monitor is perfect too.

    I used Stadia before and that streaming tech, convenience, and accessible it was amazing, and better than the rest; Google’s poor management of the platform business model not withstanding. Steam Deck was more expensive than I wanted initially, but I don’t regret all that I gained in the transition.





  • Division is an online/server-based game, so progress revolves around checkpoints, and completions of missions etc.

    You’ve not really articulated the circumstances of your problem. Like the middle of a story being left out.

    What mission are you on, is it early in the game? Are you completing the mission objectives and it is not progressing? Or do you just not know what the objective to progress the mission is?








  • If you will be moving around with it occasionally, a protective case is a good idea. This protective case has a hard-shell cover, and a kickstand (half the reason for a “dock” form factor gone). Price = $8.36. There is also the more expensive brands like JSAUX etc which are around $30-50; but have some expanded features beyond basic protection.

    The thing about a Steam Deck is that the USB-C port is on the top, so regardless of if you use a USB-C Hub, or a Dock, you still have to go through the motion of manually connecting the USB-C cable at the top. So my question is always, why pay so much extra for a “dock”.

    Another detractor from the dock form (for me) is, it forces you to have everything connected to it in view. With a Hub, you can keep everything below the deck, behind the TV etc, and only have the 1 USB-C cable connecting to the Steam Deck visible. You can go either way, just my pref. Dock maybe $30-70, USB-C x-in-1 Hub $10-20

    For some cheap controllers that work well, that are decently compact (not small) are the Stadia controllers. You can probably find them for cheap somewhere. I’ve had the same one for 3 years, still looks in great condition and no stick drift issues. I’ve seen some people find them in used game stores etc for $8-10 each. If buying online it will cost much more because people have clued in to them being good BT controllers. Bonus is they have orange thumbstick accents to match your LE Steam Deck, and come in black or beige.