
Once you have that set up you can use Shadow on your RPi via Steam link and it won’t time you out. Run Shadow on my Android phone at 5mbs and connect a keyboard/mouse/controller via Bluetooth or USB hub (I personally use a hub connected to the phone with a USB dongle.). Wait! Won’t my Shadow time out because the inputs are going through Steam? Yup :( You will now be on your Shadow desktop and can run any game as usual.
Find the “power button” icon on Steam Big Picture (top-rightish) and click “Exit Big Picture Mode”. After Shadow is up, launch steamlink on RPi. Set Steam on Shadow to auto launch and open Big Picture mode. Run steamlink on RPi and pair your Shadow device (in Steam on Shadow). Here are the quick details (you can also gather some of this online): Once you're done with that, you can proceed with the steps below.I run Shadow on a Raspberry Pi 4b right now using Steam link, and it works pretty well at 30mb bitrate (it seems to crash over time at any higher bitrate). Before moving forward, you'll probably want to check out our guide to getting started with the Raspberry Pi, if you haven't already-it'll detail all the hardware you need for this project, as well as the initial setup of Raspbian, the Raspberry Pi's operating system. Using Steam Link on the Pi is very similar to its iOS and Android app, with just a tad more setup. But for the purposes of this guide, we'll focus on Steam Link and newer Pi models. If you have an Nvidia card in the gaming PC you're streaming from, though, you can create a very similar experience with Moonlight (Opens in a new window), an open-source client for Nvidia's GameStream technology. Right Now, Steam Link is only compatible with the Raspberry Pi 3 and above. And if you have a Raspberry Pi running RetroPie, Steam Link is built in as an experimental add-on. If you want to stream those games to a TV, though, the Raspberry Pi is a perfect, inexpensive solution for doing just that. We've discussed how to stream games to your phone and tablet with the Steam Link app, and it's great-you get the mobility of playing anywhere in the house, but your gaming PC does the heavy lifting, sending the video feed to any device on the network. Remember the Steam Link, the $50 box from Valve that let you stream games from your PC to any TV in your house? The hardware has been discontinued, but Steam Link is still around as an app for iOS, Android, and-perhaps most intriguingly-the Raspberry Pi. How to Set Up Two-Factor Authentication.
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