This is good back when I tried it on Linux when it first released it overtook and my screenshot button no longer did anything.
Sadly not all that useful on Linux because it doesn’t record your microphone.
Why the fuck would I want it to record using my microphone?
No similar features I have ever used records using your microphone.
For those of us who actually have friends to play with, we like to be able to record banter.
You should probably use a third party app like OBS if you need an advanced recording setup. This is intended for simple clips.
Either way I don’t understand why you would want your own voice recorded for that purpose unless you are planning on distributing the footage on online platforms like YouTube. Saving your own banter and replying it just sounds cringe but you do you I guess.
I doubt the majority of users of these simple recording features have a need for microphone audio. It should probably be implemented but I don’t think it’s prioritised.
I do post footage to YouTube, some publicly and some privately because my friends and I actually enjoy our time together and want to remember the best moments.
The fact you think that’s cringe just makes me feel sorry for you.
Are you talking about in-game voice chat, that should be available to the game to record, or a third party tool that probably shouldn’t? If the game doesn’t need your mic, it shouldn’t access it; if it doesn’t access it, it’s not part of the gameplay recording.
That doesn’t mean it’s “not all that useful”, Linux or otherwise, just because it doesn’t cover your specific use case. I can definitely see myself using it to record brief clips - on linux - without having to run OBS in the background.
I see this as a substitute for Shadowplay, which records your microphone if you enable it, which I previously used on Windows to record gameplay clips, but it doesn’t exist on Linux.
Steam Game Recording can record your microphone on Windows, but they haven’t bothered to make it work on Linux for whatever reason.
As currently implemented on Linux, it captures all system audio and cannot be configured to do anything otherwise, so if you’re talking with friends on TeamSpeak, it’ll only capture half of the fucking conversation. Making it next to useless.
I’m getting really annoyed that people are going out of their way to invalidate my opinion here.
Your opinion is posited as an absolute: “This is useless” suggests you consider it useless in general. People arguing otherwise are challenging that general claim by providing examples where it can be useful.
They’re not invalidsting your subjective perception that it’s not particularly useful for your primary use case. In fact, I’ve seen explicit acknowledgements that your use case will require different tools. If anything, your doubling down on the assertion that it is useless invalidates those that do find it useful.
For contrast, consider the more personal phrasing “This isn’t really useful to me, because I generally clip conversations and it doesn’t capture my mic.” This both respects that other people may find it useful and makes it clear why you don’t.
Aside from the semantics, you might be able to work around the issue by customising your audio setup, which is something I don’t know if Windows lets you. I don’t know what exactly it captures and what audio server you use, but if it can be pointed at a specific virtual device, you might be able to loop back your audio input to that device and use a combine-stream to route your other audio both to that virtual and your actual pysical output device.
Your opinion is posited as an absolute: “This is useless”
That’s not even correct. I said “not all that useful” and then “next to useless”. Never “absolutely useless”.
The whole point of this feature is to provide something built into Steam that works without a whole bunch of fiddling like other recording software. It currently fails at that on Linux because the implementation of it is half-assed. That is my position. End of conversation.
That’s not even correct. I said “not all that useful” and then “next to useless”. Never “absolutely useless”.
It’s a simplification to condense the core point:
People say “I like this! This is useful!”
You say “It’s not all that useful”
I reply “It is to me”
You double down “next to useless”
I say “For you maybe, but for me it’s very useful”The essence is that it’s not very useful to you, but it is for others. Yet you steamroll over that (subjective) take to double down on how shitty it is.
The whole point of this feature is to provide something built into Steam that works without a whole bunch of fiddling like other recording software.
It does. It’s a built-in utility to record gameplay clips. That’s neat.
It currently fails at that on Linux because the implementation of it is half-assed.
It’s lacking one feature, yes, but I’d not call that a failure if plenty of people seem fine without it.
That is my position.
Rich, coming from “You’re wrong when you say it’s useful”.
End of conversation.
“I’m right, you’re wrong and I refuse to hear otherwise”
Alright then. I figured you were genuinely confused and thought maybe seeing the other perspective could help clear things up. Guess you’d have to actually look for that to work.
I love this feature because it makes my GPU scream and only captures the top left corner of the screen!
Finally a use for those back buttons
This will be good to replace Shadowplay eventually
Live in the moment instead dude.