![]() ![]() Ranked too flawed and brawls can be fun but clan battles overflows in crap. However I spend more time in operations because Coop has run it's course and does not offer adequate rewards or FXP gain and Random is too toxic. What wows is a amusing distracting navy ship shooting at other navy ships in so called battle. ![]() These platforms have been active long before WG and Wows came along 6 years ago for me. What steam does for me is retain the original games on file so when I rebuild, reimage or build new computers I can have all of the games downloaded and running updated within a couple of days. Its not worth the investment in time for that kind of gaming and frankly is pretty crappy against many games on steam already that I play (Simulations and others) Even then I will not expose the Steam stuff to wifi or any other form other than router based gaming over the internet. WOWS is NOT THAT QUALITY to game anywhere any time away from the big computer. So hooking direct fiber to me will be the apex of internet connecting. Fiber is coming to my place as it is to the rest of the area. And game at those speeds which is really fast compared to my pretty decently fast connection. The closest thing to it that I do is tether my Smartphone via USB to my big computer off the cell tower which is straight fiber optic. As anyone ever tried to use the original steam controller to play WoWS? Or used a tool to map keyboards/mouse to an Xbox controller maybe?Ĭould be good, could be bad. Is anyone looking into it? I am a bit skeptical about how trading up a mouse for joystick or a trackpad would feel like I'd probably hate it, at least at first. So in theory, it is very likely this will allow to experience WoWS everywhere on the beach, during commuting, etc. As a portable console for PC games, I expect it will support the ability to map keyboard keys to the buttons and joysticks, mouse to joystick input possibly (it already has trackpads). It also has a touchscreen, of course. Lots of Windows games will work on SteamOS using Proton (a WiNE derivative, optimized for video games). It allows to remotely play game on your PC using Steam Link technology, and it powerful enough to run lots of game locally. It looks pretty interesting, at least on paper. ![]() Yesterday, Steam announced its first portable PC console, the Steam Deck: ![]()
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