Steamdeck/Custom_Boot
2022-09-27 02:50:16 +02:00
..
Consoles Fixes 2022-09-27 02:33:45 +02:00
random_boot_animations More Boot Animations 2022-09-27 02:50:16 +02:00
Valve_Portal Fixes 2022-09-27 02:33:45 +02:00
README.md Credits 2022-09-27 01:54:26 +02:00

Custom Steamdeck Animations

I try to collect the Steamdeck Boot animations I can find. If you are the owner/creator of these Animations and you don't want to see your animation here, please shoot me a message.

I do not try to get credits for this, I just try to provide a library for people to search for a suitable animation. I do not 'steal' animations, I collect only publicly available animations and try to provide credits on where I got them from.

How to add Boot animations

Original tutorial

Description: Set a custom boot video to play when entering the OS.
Warning: Do this at your own risk.

  1. Enter Desktop Mode

  2. Make a 10 second .webm video file. Try to keep pixel count low. A minimal design runs better than an anime clip. Through my own experience.

  3. Go to home/deck/.local/share/Steam/steamui/movies/ Backup the unmodified deck_startup.webm file somewhere before copying its name and deleting it in the current directory. Move our custom .webm file to the current directory and change its name to deck_startup.webm Open the current directory in the terminal and where X stands for the size of the unmodified deck_startup.webm file type the following

truncate --size=X deck_startup.webm

  1. Go to deck/home/.local/share/Steam/steamui/css/ and backup the library.css file unmodified somewhere, then edit the one in the current directory. Where it says "video", make sure to have set the following:

video{flex-grow:1;width:100%;height:100%;z-index:10}

  1. Once you saved the modified library.css Open the current directory in the terminal, where X stands for the file size of the unmodified library.css we backed up earlier type the following:

truncate -s X library.css

  1. Switch to gaming mode or restart the device to see video.

Side Notes: The truncate command in Linux is used to either shrink or extend the size of a given file to what you desire.