I love my Deck, but the multi user setup is terrible

Opafi@feddit.de to Steam Deck@sopuli.xyz – 56 points –

Does anybody really use the steam deck with multiple users and can tell me what I'm doing wrong?

I got the mid range deck, enjoyed how I could play almost my entire library and created a steam account for my oldest son so he could use it, too, without us messing up each other's save games or stats. I set up family sharing for our accounts and added some games to the family library, but from that point onwards the experience has pretty much been a mess for me.

First of all, setting up the family sharing was pretty much a convoluted process where I really didn't understand what I was supposed to be doing... Were the family PINs supposed to be the same for both accounts? Who selects what in order to get the young man to play skyrim? It was all weird, but we eventually managed. The result is, however, an annoying setup that is just weird.

  • When I turn on the deck, it now always starts in family mode on my account, so I always have to enter the PIN before doing anything that is not playing a game that I added to the family library. Which is most of my games. Shop won't open before I enter the pin, nothing works while being in family mode and it always starts in family mode.
  • Considering how often I have to insert the family PIN, it's annoying how buggy the keyboard is with the PIN entry form... Every time I enter a digit via the touch pads, the keyboard just freezes for a second or so. No idea if that has something to do with localisation or something.
  • Starting a game won't ask for the account... I have both accounts set up on the deck, but unlike e.g. the switch, the deck always starts games on the account that was last logged in, no questions asked.
  • There is no proper separation of data for each user. When I added vampire survivors to the family library and he started it on his account afterwards, the first thing that happened was a hundred achievements getting unlocked because his game simply loaded my state. Same for other games which just show save games from all users, which is super annoying for the usual auto save and continue game flow.
  • He says he can't really chat or play games in multiplayer if he's using my shared games on his account... No idea what's going on there, have not yet gotten around to trouble shoot that.

Am I doing something wrong or what is this? We had the deck with us on our last vacation and with the Internet being just not available a lot of the time (which is imperative to switch accounts) and all those issues outlined above, it basically got no usage at all and I'm getting more and more annoyed by this.

10

For what it's worth, the multi-user experience in my case has been pretty seamless. Here's my setup if it helps anyone:

My roommate and I both have separate steam accounts (it sounds like you may be looking for a 'child' account or something like that, those may be a thing but I'm unfortunately completely unfamiliar with that, so ymmv if you use that).
We set up family sharing between us to access each other's games, but did that I think entirely on a computer via that steam client. No pins or anything were necessary iirc, just a slightly convoluted sequence of logging in and out of steam on the same computer and clicking the needed 'family sharing' buttons.

Then I set up the deck with my account, logged out, and had my roommate log in. There's an option somewhere to start the steam deck at the account select screen every time it turns on rather than automatically logging in to the last used account.

It sounds like most of the difficulty is coming from the family sharing setup. Like I said, I'm not knowledgeable on if steam has 'child' accounts that can be linked to other accounts, if so it's possible that none of what my process was like applies.

Hopefully that's at least somewhat helpful

This was my experience as well, though I did notice that many games did not properly isolate game saves from separate steam accounts.

Tip to any devs that might read this: organize saves based on the steam account logged in, not the user of the PC (always "deck" for the steam deck) and definitely not just a single location among the game's data.

We set up family sharing between us to access each other's games, but did that I think entirely on a computer via that steam client. No pins or anything were necessary iirc, just a slightly convoluted sequence of logging in and out of steam on the same computer and clicking the needed 'family sharing' buttons.

Just a note that family sharing is per device, so you'd both have to login to the Steam Deck and enable family sharing. You can't just login to some external computer and have sharing work on the deck

As a single user, the steam deck has been basically perfect. This is good info though when Iā€™m talking it up to other people.

There are a few different issues interacting here.

  1. The "family mode" users that require PIN are a child protection measure, and are not connected to Family Sharing. Remove the PIN from all adult accounts. Now you will see your whole library and be able to go to the store, and when you switch to your son's user, he will not be able to go to the store and will only see the games you have done "Add to Family Games" on. This is how my library is set up: sharing to my partner and child, only child's account has PIN.

  2. I don't know the cause of your experience with the keyboard, but if you remove the PIN from your own account, that should make it less painful.

  3. This is just the way the Steam client works, not a Deck-specific feature: you are logged into one account until you change it. The PS5 is the same way.

  4. In my experience, failure to separate game state between users is a game-by-game problem. Most Windows-native games running in Proton separate their saves by user correctly. (I do not know whether this happens because the Deck generates a completely clean Proton environment for each Steam user, or whether the Proton environment is shared and the game is just doing what it would do on a Windows PC to separate saves.) The games where I have seen saves wrongly shared, ironically, are all games with native Linux ports.

  5. If you haven't already, switch to your son's account, unlock the PIN, and go through all the Steam multiplayer/chat settings. We have all that turned off for our child. As far as I know, a game family-shared to a user should behave exactly as if the user owned the game, from a functional point of view.

Dang, that's good information, and is pretty much a deal breaker for me. šŸ˜ž I've been on the fence for a while but I guess this pushes me off that fence for now.

To do multi-user correctly it will take them rearchitecting a few things. Here's what I'd image is currently required:

  1. Game artifacts would need to move into a common area to prevent duplication (or utilize a COW filesystem)
  2. Game compat data will need to move under the user home directory and not immediately live with the other artifacts like it does now
  3. A new login screen will need to be created that actually switches between system users (will need to use some password separate from an account password for offline use)
  4. Some extra state tracking may be useful. Switching back and forth between desktop and game mode will prompt the account switch menu but some data can be stored to make it remember who the current active user is...

Most of the tools to do this are already present but it'll take some time for someone to coordinate it and the fact that the product has made it this far without such a feature speaks to it's demand. Hopefully someone takes a look at it though because it really shouldn't be that bad.

The one thing I would really like them to improve on is the process of switching users. I have a Chimera system in the living room and it's so many steps to switch accounts.

Waiting for steam to "shut down" when switching users is very janky.