Sweet, I was planning on tackling these myself eventually. Thank goodness someone beat me to it. It'll definitely come in handy when adjusting graphics settings for AAA games on the Steam Deck.
The Metro Exodus Enhanced Edition was quite mindblowing how good it looked while also performaning well when I played it on my mid-range PC. I actually tried it on my Deck too even before raytracing was officially unlocked.
It also has dualsense support, with the adaptive triggers etc! So if you have a dualsense controller, try it out! It's really nice feeling the resistance of the triggers when shooting :D
A lot do! Every Playstation studios game (spider man for example), the newer call of duties (starting with cold war I believe), cyberpunk and many more, if you look up 'dualsense pc gaming wiki' you'll find a list with all of them!
I would rate this video to 69, which in my books stands for n i c e 😂 And no u are awesome. So much work and so much research, trying out etc. incredible and very helpful for steam deck users^^
Raytracing is the biggest gimmick people are falling for. There is NO point for it until everyone can have it and games can be made around raytracing, like using a mirror to check for enemies behind you. However, reflective mirrors already exist in games and is nothing new.
ye who needs good graphics why even have graphics, if not everyone can have graphics we should all play text based adventures theres no point in having graphics uwu :3
@@drzej3k794 I agree, it's more interesting to me. Obviously, the Steam Deck isn't powerful enough to play every game on the market but watching the little thing chug along and really push is so fun to see. I'm also insane and don't really mind the blocky ass 720p 30fps look. (bias, since I grew up with older titles, if it runs consistently I'm happy.)
Sweet, I was planning on tackling these myself eventually. Thank goodness someone beat me to it. It'll definitely come in handy when adjusting graphics settings for AAA games on the Steam Deck.
The Metro Exodus Enhanced Edition was quite mindblowing how good it looked while also performaning well when I played it on my mid-range PC. I actually tried it on my Deck too even before raytracing was officially unlocked.
It also has dualsense support, with the adaptive triggers etc! So if you have a dualsense controller, try it out! It's really nice feeling the resistance of the triggers when shooting :D
@@BakaKuma_uwu Nice! I didn't know that any PC games officially supported the unique Dual Sense features.
A lot do! Every Playstation studios game (spider man for example), the newer call of duties (starting with cold war I believe), cyberpunk and many more, if you look up 'dualsense pc gaming wiki' you'll find a list with all of them!
@@BakaKuma_uwu Cool! Thanks for letting me know. :)
this guy seems like he knows his stuff, this video was super interesting and insightful. I would rate it 5 stars
Thank you so much, you're so cool
@@BakaKuma_uwu dude...
@@BakaKuma_uwu I cringe so hard when I see trolls trying to pronounce Wolfenstein, stop being f stupid ah
We don't talk about what I did to my Steam Deck and RT
Now I'm scared
I would rate this video to 69, which in my books stands for n i c e 😂
And no u are awesome.
So much work and so much research, trying out etc. incredible and very helpful for steam deck users^^
no u no u ❤️
Viel zu wenig abos für die quali
dankeschön aber warum auf deutsch 👀
@@BakaKuma_uwuhe recognizet ze akzent 😁
Raytracing is the biggest gimmick people are falling for. There is NO point for it until everyone can have it and games can be made around raytracing, like using a mirror to check for enemies behind you.
However, reflective mirrors already exist in games and is nothing new.
ye who needs good graphics why even have graphics, if not everyone can have graphics we should all play text based adventures theres no point in having graphics uwu :3
@@BakaKuma_uwu I have some strange satisfaction in pushing "underpowered" hardware to its max. Like playing Doom .wad's on a GBA.
@@drzej3k794 I agree, it's more interesting to me. Obviously, the Steam Deck isn't powerful enough to play every game on the market but watching the little thing chug along and really push is so fun to see. I'm also insane and don't really mind the blocky ass 720p 30fps look. (bias, since I grew up with older titles, if it runs consistently I'm happy.)