Steam
Game
Recording
is
officially
out
of
beta
and
available
to
all
users,
giving
PC,
Mac,
and
Steam
Deck
players
a
built-in
way
to
record
and
share
audio
and
video
from
their
gaming
sessions.
It
joins
many
other
ways
PC
gamers
have
been
able
to
record
their
highlights,
including
as
a
feature
of
tools
like
the
Xbox
Game
Bar,
Nvidia
GeForce,
and
AMD’s
Adrenalin.
This
version
of
the
Steam
client
is
also
the
first
to
drop
support
for
Windows
7
and
8
machines,
as
well
as
Macs
running
macOS
10.13
and
10.14
after
Valve
announced
the
move
at
the
beginning
of
this
year.
After
an
automatic
update,
players
can
start
recordings
manually
using
a
hotkey
(Ctrl
+
F11
is
the
default)
or
set
it
to
trigger
automatically,
with
options
to
restrict
the
length,
quality,
and
storage
space
that
Steam
can
use.
Valve
says
it
works
with
any
game,
including
non-Steam
games
that
allow
Steam
Overlay
to
run.
Recording
is
off
by
default
—
you’ll
find
its
settings
in
a
new
Game
Recording
tab
in
Steam’s
settings.
Valve
has
updated
Steam
Game
Recording
with
a
handful
of
new
features
that
weren’t
there
when
the
beta
period
began
in
June,
including
adding
“advanced”
export
options
and
the
ability
to
configure
game-specific
settings.
The
company
also
added
Session
View,
which
includes
a
“Recordings
&
Screenshots
manager
with
game-specific
tags
and
data.”
Original author: Wes Davis
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