HoloISO is SteamOS 3 Without the Deck (2024)

HoloISO is SteamOS 3 Without the Deck (1)

Like the look of SteamOS 3 but don’t want to go to the expense of getting a Steam Deck just to use it? HoloISO has a solution, as reported by Gaming on Linux.

Valve’s failure to release a version of SteamOS 3 to the general public looks like a major oversight, especially as an earlier version - based on Debian 8, aka Jessie - is still hanging around with a warning it’s not compatible with Steam Deck. The available version is a hangover from Valve’s earlier flirtation with hardware, the Steam Machine, and even comes with instructions on how to build a DIY machine. Otherwise, all that’s available from Valve is a Steam Deck recovery image.

The version our Steam Deck-owning friends are using is no longer based on Debian (a version based on Debian 9 was canned last year), but instead uses Arch Linux as its foundations. It contains the Proton Windows compatibility layer, and goes by the codename Holo.

Hence the name of HoloISO, which can be found on GitHub as a repository from Adam Jafarov. “The code, and packages are straight from Valve with zero possible edits. [The] ISO is being built on [the] official Steam Deck recovery image running inside [a] QEMU instance,” the Readme file reads. There are a few caveats for anyone wanting to try it out: the ISO only boots if written to a flash drive with one of four apps (BalenaEtcher, RosaImageWriter, Fedora Media Writer or dd with 4MB block size). It doesn’t play well with Nvidia GPUs, requiring proprietary drivers, and Intel Arc or integrated GPUs aren’t looking great either, requiring a tweak to Gamescope and MESA.

What does work, assuming you have the compatible hardware, include the first-boot experience, Plasma desktop (including Valve’s Vapor skin), the Deck interface, and behind the scenes stuff like shader precaching, neofetch, and FPS limiting.

It might be worth waiting a little while to see how quickly the project solves its current problems, however, as the latest release, known as Hallway Pizza, is “probably” the final beta before a stable version is released.

Stay On the Cutting Edge: Get the Tom's Hardware Newsletter

Get Tom's Hardware's best news and in-depth reviews, straight to your inbox.

HoloISO is SteamOS 3 Without the Deck (6)

Ian Evenden

Freelance News Writer

Ian Evenden is a UK-based news writer for Tom’s Hardware US. He’ll write about anything, but stories about Raspberry Pi and DIY robots seem to find their way to him.

More about linux

Linux distros ban 'tainted' AI-generated code — NetBSD and Gentoo lead the charge on forbidding AI-written codeLinus Torvalds now favors Ampere Arm chip over Apple Silicon MacBook for building Linux kernels — says he's now doing more Arm64 Linux testing than ever

Latest

M3 MacBook Air 16GB 13-inch laptop is on sale for $1,149
See more latest►

1 CommentComment from the forums

  • -Fran-

    But it's not like you need SteamOS to take advantage of Proton. You can just make use of all the things they've added to it in any Linux distro. I know because I have SteamOS in a VM and have Proton working in it just fine playing stuff for experimentation.

    As for all the other things they've added to the OS. Well, they're specific to the Steam Deck and hardly "portable" to a regular PC build. They can't release all of that without first trying to make it non-tailor made, no? Or at least, that's what I'd say. Happy to be wrong there, though.

    Regards.

    Reply

Most Popular
Silicon Motion's PCIe 5.0 SSD controller is finally coming in Q4 — low-power SSDs will leverage SM2508
AI-focused MSI desktop has a 1080p touch screen built into the front of its chassis
Geometric Future's Model 0 Flamingo is a PC case that folds around your Mini-ITX motherboard
Hygon 8-core Chinese CPU matches Zen 2 multi-threaded performance in Geekbench
Adata shows off hybrid air/water cooling tower at Computex — new PSUs and PCIe 5.0 SSDs also on deck
ASRock Z890 Taichi Aqua comes with ten USB Type-C ports, two being Thunderbolt ports
Acemagic's Z1A is a dual-screen laptop you might actually want to use
Best of Computex 2024: Hardware Evolution Meets the AI Revolution
Noctua NH-D15 G2 update has quieter fans, more heatpipes, new offset design
Computex 2024 Day Three Wrap-Up: Cheap PCIe 5.0 SSDs, Samsung’s AI monitors, cases galore, and more
Teamgroup shows off SSD cooling including a 120mm radiator — seems a bit overkill for 12W M.2 SSDs
HoloISO is SteamOS 3 Without the Deck (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Rubie Ullrich

Last Updated:

Views: 6108

Rating: 4.1 / 5 (72 voted)

Reviews: 95% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Rubie Ullrich

Birthday: 1998-02-02

Address: 743 Stoltenberg Center, Genovevaville, NJ 59925-3119

Phone: +2202978377583

Job: Administration Engineer

Hobby: Surfing, Sailing, Listening to music, Web surfing, Kitesurfing, Geocaching, Backpacking

Introduction: My name is Rubie Ullrich, I am a enthusiastic, perfect, tender, vivacious, talented, famous, delightful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.