Hi, this is Wayne again with a topic “Chromebooks aren’t useless anymore! – Steam on Chrome OS Alpha”.
[ Narrator ] Forget what you know about Chromebooks. This is a gaming laptop. Now Steam is finally coming to Chromebooks baby., And that means that you and all of your Chromebook friends can finally join the elite league of gamers, or does it We tried the Steam Alpha and it’s cool, but it might actually really be Chrome itself that isn’t ready For gaming., Let me explain why, after our sponsor. Build Redux, Build Redux offers competitive pricing as compared to building a PC yourself.. Their website makes it easy to configure your build alongside their helpful support, guides.
Head to buildredux.com/linus and start creating your PC today, the easy way., The thing that makes Chromebooks great is also what makes them awful for gamers. A laser focus on simplicity.. You can do browser things and maybe run a couple of Android apps, but that’s about it. Sure.
In 2018, Google added a Linux implementation called Crostini that allows you to use pretty much any desktop environment you’d want on your Chromebook., But that’s not an improvement to Chrome. Os., You can do that on any computer, but with the introduction of native Steam gaming, this 11-year-old OS much like an 11-year-old human, looks like it will be doing a lot of growing and changing in the coming years.. So how does Steam on Chromebooks work? Well, since it’s an Alpha, you’ll have to switch to the dev channel, change a few flags and type a couple lines into the terminal and boom You’re up and running.. Assuming, of course, you have a supported Chromebook.. We have two: the Acer Chromebook Spin 713 and the Asus Chromebook CX9., So why these two? Well? They are among these six supported devices that can run this Alpha.. Yes, you heard correctly just six 11th gen Intel Chromebooks are supported for the Alpha.. Support should expand as this rolls out, but for now, like the Food Network, you can get a taste vicariously through our video.
Yum ( slurps ) tasty.. First up, let’s talk about gaming performance.. We were hoping to compare Steam on Chrome OS to these same machines, running Windows by swapping the M.2 SSDs., But yeah. No, they won’t even boot. Up. Turns out these Chromebooks use coreboot instead of UEFI, meaning we’d have to flash firmware onto them.. But since these are on loan from their respective manufacturers, we couldn’t do that..
That means a one-to-one comparison on the same laptop will have to wait until Steam is available on Chrome, OS Flex. The version of the OS you can install on any machine. For now what we can do is compare the Steam Alpha to running Steam games in Crostini on the same machine. Now remember it’s an Alpha.. There are a bunch of issues like no DX12 games, weird performance and scaling at non-native resolutions and a Kanye West level of general instability..
So while you should take these results with a pinch of salt, if you’re chomping at the bit to piece some Gs on your C book, here’s what you can expect. Our limited benching gave us some strange results.. You could say they were a little bananas..
Lttstore.Com. Half-life Lost Coast worked swimmingly with very slight gains in the Alpha over the Linux implementation.. But when we look at the Talos Principle, well, things get interesting. In Crostini the game was unplayable scoring between 0 and 3 frames per second., But when it ran through the Alpha. Well, look at that. That’S a playable game, But curiously, it performed substantially better on our lower-spec I5 Chromebook a strange trend. We noticed in all of our benchmarks, despite the I7 equipped CX9 possessing more execution units than the GPU on the I5.. We think it’s a driver issue on the Intel side of things because it persisted in both Crostini and the Alpha, but we were unable to nail down exactly what was happening.
In other Alpha weirdness. We tried to benchmark Shadow of the Tomb Raider, but that just stopped working altogether after an OS update., That’s what an Alpha’s like folks. Now the bugs are to be expected., But the thing that shakes my belief that gaming could succeed on Chrome OS is that PC Gaming often requires tinkering and Chrome OS is, by definition a limited OS.. For example, file management is horrendously obfuscated.. You can’t tell where your files are located in relation to other folders or even navigate to your Steam game. Files.. You can see the file structure by using Steam’s file browser, but you can’t do anything with it..
If Google wants to take gaming seriously, they need to make it easier for people to troubleshoot and manage their device.. You know it’s like medium-level, tinkering., Chrome OS. Has this massive chasm between the limited things typical users can do and the unlimited possibilities available to developers., But what about gamers? It’S like you, get the choice between a tricycle or a unicycle.. I need a middle ground.. Where can I do things like install a mod or tweak graphics or power management settings without needing dev level, knowledge of the OS.? You can’t just power wash your problems away when you have a quarter terabyte of content to redownload..
But let’s talk about why Google is bringing Steam to ChromeOS at all.. Back in 2013, Google took a stab at making Chromebooks premium with the Chromebook Pixel a laptop. That was just a couple hundred dollars shy of directly competing with the MacBook Pro. And it was a flop.
Reviewers liked the hardware, but no one wanted Chrome OS., So Google tried again and then again and again. And after nearly a decade. I think that Google has finally realized that if they wan na sell a premium Chromebook, they need to sell the idea of a premium. Os. And gaming is part of that idea, especially for the next generation of Chromebook buyers.. You see, Google has been invading schools all over the world, leading to scores of children being brought up on Google’s OS.
And as they switch from their school provided laptops through their own personal devices. Google is hoping they don’t want to jump ship by making Chrome OS a compelling package as a sole personal computer.. Google would love for you to switch, but they’re trying to get your kids to stay and gaming will be a core part of that retention.
Plan. Wait! A second: how does Stadia fit into all this? Aha, you forgot about Stadia, didn’t you In classic Google fashion, it seems, like the left hand, doesn’t really know what the right hand is doing, because bringing Steam to Chromebook seems like it’s going to harm Stadia’s growth.. I mean sure local gaming and game streaming are different, but Stadia is Google’s gaming brand. And it seems like they’re fine to just kinda leave it in the wings rather than make any effort to integrate it into Chrome OS.. In my opinion, that would be a more logical, move.
Stadia as a cloud-based service is more in line with Chrome, OS vision of a cloud-based future., Whereas traditional PC gaming, that is being introduced by this Steam Alpha is kind of antithetical to how Chrome OS has always Worked., Oh, this one died how appropriate. – And there are other reasons I don’t want – a game on a Chromebook anyway.. The OS sucks at translating track pad inputs to accurate mouse movement. Window management is slow and frustrating., And the design language has a general lack of information density and I can’t change any of it.
While I certainly welcome the idea of playing games, I already own on my Chromebook for this to work properly. Google needs to really commit to making gaming a good experience., And that means that Chrome OS will have to become something. It’S never been.. That might be good for gamers, but bad for people who are happy with Chrome’s lightweight simplicity.. It’S a balance that will be hard to find, but Google, I think you could do it. So long as you don’t abandon the project.. Today’S video is brought to you by Privacy.com. Privacy.com lets. You buy things online using virtual cards rather than your real credit cards. Mother’s day.
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Thanks for watching this video. Hey. If you liked it, why don’t you go check out the one where Linus struggles to buy his son, a Chromebook against Linus’ will.? We make him do these things for content., (, laughs, ), .