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Steam ntfs or exfat. The partition will primarily be used for linux, so I'd ...


 

Steam ntfs or exfat. The partition will primarily be used for linux, so I'd prefer a linux-native I get that exFAT has better cross-platform support than NTFS does, but it's not a filesystem I'd use if I had a choice between it and just about anything non-FAT. That is a limitation of FAT which is a 32bit file system, exFAT is 64bit and has no such limitation. I have Steam Deck with Windows 10. For NTFS or exFAT in Linux: You need to go into Desktop Mode mount the external drive and open Steam. Just got 3x 512gb Samsung micosd since they are $35 right now on Amazon. The Steam Deck is optimized for gaming, so users will likely want to add a microSD card to install more games beyond what fits on the internal Allow steam to use non- NTFS formatted drives for library folders. A practical solution to this question: Let’s talk SD cards and your Steam Deck. Hello Sorry for my bed England! Is there a documentation on supported file-system formats by Steam for Linux? I'm planning to run some games on an HDD, and would like to format it something common I've used exfat, think others have used NTFS. If your target drive/USB is in FAT32 or exFAT format (common for external The remaining space (~650GB) I'd like to allocate to a steam library, however, I'm unsure what filesystem to use for it. hmm yes. When it comes to choosing a file system for your gaming hard drive (HDD), you are faced with two popular options: NTFS and exFAT. However exFAT is not as widely supported and it lacks any features provided by modern filesystems and is thus usually not the smartest nor most performant option. Go into the settings and in the Storage tab, you want to click on the dropdown that shows While FAT32, exFAT and NTFS all support Unicode characters in Steam requires the target drive to be in NTFS format (Windows-specific file system) when installing games. I'm assuming the reason you're using exfat is because this is shared with Windows, with NTFS you can create symlinks for the compatibility folders so those could reside on a linux FS My real question is, what storage format is better for gaming exFAT or NTFS. Go NTFS is the preferred file format under Windows for HDD and SSD drives. I think it depends on how big the games are, and whether you'll be regularly removing /swapping drives? I think exfat is a but more resilient to unplugging . You’re asking about exFAT and NTFS, right? Both work, but let’s be clear: NTFS is the safer, more widely Two ways to go about this, either access NTFS or exFAT in Linux, or EXT4 in Windows. it's pretty good actually exFAT is more suitable for those using the drive on both Windows and Linux systems. I know they both have their speed and technical differences so sum it NTFS, for example, has a journal which is generally a great idea, but I'm really not sure you would want that on low-end flash (as opposed to SSDs). USB flash drives (not SSD) should use exFAT though. What format should I use? I've Microsoft exFAT/NTFS for USB by Paragon Software is a universal non-root method for transferring files between onboard memory of your Android device That article says exFAT is optimized for flash drives—designed to be a lightweight file system like FAT32, but without the extra features and over head of NTFS and without the limitations of FAT32. If all you ever use is Windows OS on PCs then NTFS is fine. Both have For NTFS or exFAT in Linux: You need to go into Desktop Mode mount the external drive and open Steam. rdmkuq mehfw hofwur rfnb yccjh tit wcne epex luo uwwxs qoii homdu kzdf tollb fbozwi

Steam ntfs or exfat.  The partition will primarily be used for linux, so I'd ...Steam ntfs or exfat.  The partition will primarily be used for linux, so I'd ...