Steam

Valve has released a native (currently x86-only) Linux client for their Steam platform as part of a public beta available to all steam users.

Notice
This is beta software. The .deb released by Valve is actually only an installer that pulls the actual steam version from their servers and places it as well as the games into ~/Steam/. So, the official package manager cannot be involved in managing games and steam updates.

Games

 * Official Valve Linux Games List
 * CDR List (includes future (beta) releases for Linux)

Installation
Download the .deb archive found here, extract and put the following files into the same directory: Make steam executable and run it. There are also a few icons in the .deb archive.
 * bootstraplinux_ubuntu12_32.tar.xz (from the .deb archive)
 * steam.desktop (from the .deb archive)
 * steam (get the script here)

Prerequisites
Things you need in order to run steam.

Dependencies
If you don't use the ebuild then you can create a set to conveniently manage and update the steam dependencies without changing your world file. After you have created the file /etc/portage/sets/steam as shown below, run:

Kernel
You need tmpfs activated in your kernel and /dev/shm mounted.

Troubleshooting
A few tricks to get things working.

Video drivers

 * Nvidia: You will need to unmask latest.
 * If S3TC support is missing, try media-libs/libtxc_dxtn.

Fonts
Some people seem to have problems with missing fonts. A user reported it being solved by emerging.

Sometimes Xorg does not recognise the new fonts installed. To fix this temp. run:

You may also need if fonts don't appear to be rendering correctly.

Mouse cursor
If your WM/DE does not set a mouse pointer theme, then Steam will overwrite the default X11 cursor theme, often resulting in a reversed pointer from left to right.

To fix this, just install and enable a compatible cursor theme via your WM/DE (e.g. ).

You can also enable the installed theme manually with the following method:

If the mouse cursor gets stuck pointing in the wrong direction after exiting steam you can work around that via:

Flashplayer on amd64
Get the 32bit flashplayer from adobe and extract libflashplayer.so to your current working dir. Now run:

Alternatively emerge with 32bit useflag and run:

Team Fortress 2
If you only get a black screen for 1-2 seconds, try adding "-nojoy" to Game->Properties->"Set Launch Options".

If you have problems with sound and pulseaudio, try starting with and also check this post in FGO.

Running non-native games
Non-native games can be "piped" through wine via binfmt. See here and here. This currently works only for games which have OS-check disabled.

Further help
Before you ask anywhere else, refer to the gentoo forum thread. Post your solutions and update this wiki page if someone confirms. Please don't remove content without Discussion unless it's wrong content.

External resources

 * Valve Linux blog
 * Steam for Linux community
 * Bugtracker
 * Steam entry in ArchLinux wiki
 * Common Steam Problems & Fixes (team fusion)