To ensure games run well on Linux either via Native Linux builds or Windows games with Proton, part of the magic is in the Steam Linux Runtime. A new version of it, the Steam Linux Runtime 4.0 was recently put up with some pretty big changes.

What’s the point of it? It ensures Steam and games run through Steam on Linux work properly across all the many different Linux distributions. Another secret Valve sauce for Linux. Well, not secret at all but you get my meaning I’m sure.

  • Kevin@programming.dev
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    8 hours ago

    You can select Steam Runtime Versions in the Compatibility tab too, separate from Proton versions

    • Victor@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      Oh okay, I guess that’s in the main Steam settings, not per game as the other person suggested.

      • Venat0r@lemmy.world
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        5 hours ago

        You can select it per game as well, steam runtime 3.0 and now presumably steam runtime 4.0 should show up in the same drop down menu next to proton 1.0, proton 10.0 in the compatibility options

      • Björn@swg-empire.de
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        5 hours ago

        No, it is a per game setting. When your game is a native Linux game it will use one of the Steam runtimes. If you had a Linux native game and selected Proton instead of a Steam Linux runtime Steam would download the Windows version of the game.

        With Linux native games you usually don’t have to touch this setting.

        • Victor@lemmy.world
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          33 minutes ago

          Right but you can’t change the native runtime per game. You can only change the compatibility layer (Proton) globally and per game. The runtime is static obviously, and either used or not used. I’m guessing Proton bypasses the native runtime by having the game interacting with it? Or maybe it is a translation layer? Both? Anyway, doesn’t matter. 🙂 What wasn’t the problem.

          But I’d still be interested in how to check which version I have, just to know.

          Edit: hold on, does the runtime show up in the same list as Proton versions? That would explain what you all are talking about. And only for native Linux games. That’s why I haven’t seen it before I guess.