I found a way to prevent Steam from updating the game
I just figured out how to prevent Steam from updating Valheim unless I want it to. I was able to get a backup of Valheim version .209.10 working again and Steam can't update it.
tl:dr : I changed ownership of the Valheim folders so the Steam client running as a non privileged user can not delete, change, replace any files in the Valheim folder. The save files are in a dirrecnt directory and unaffected.
Sadly this does not fix the curent issues with the last 2 updates unless you happen to have a backup of the Valheim folder from before things went FUBAR. (you do make backups of the game folders before installing mods right?)
This is a Linux solution. I don't know if this is even possible with the newer versions of Windows. Last ver I worked with was 7
The games version will remain locked until ownership of the files is changed back to original settings
Note that this will cause issues connecting to servers running newer versions of the game.
details for the fellow techies :D
As root in the
~/.steam/debian-installation/steamapps/common
directory I used
'/bin/chown -R root:staff Valheim'
to recursivly change the ownership all files in the Valheim directory to owner:root and group:staff. This ownership:group setting allows non root users to execute the game files but not change them.
EDIT
I realized recently that Just setting the files to read only would probably work too, and is a possible solution in a Windows environment
tl:dr : I changed ownership of the Valheim folders so the Steam client running as a non privileged user can not delete, change, replace any files in the Valheim folder. The save files are in a dirrecnt directory and unaffected.
Sadly this does not fix the curent issues with the last 2 updates unless you happen to have a backup of the Valheim folder from before things went FUBAR. (you do make backups of the game folders before installing mods right?)
This is a Linux solution. I don't know if this is even possible with the newer versions of Windows. Last ver I worked with was 7
The games version will remain locked until ownership of the files is changed back to original settings
Note that this will cause issues connecting to servers running newer versions of the game.
details for the fellow techies :D
As root in the
~/.steam/debian-installation/steamapps/common
directory I used
'/bin/chown -R root:staff Valheim'
to recursivly change the ownership all files in the Valheim directory to owner:root and group:staff. This ownership:group setting allows non root users to execute the game files but not change them.
EDIT
I realized recently that Just setting the files to read only would probably work too, and is a possible solution in a Windows environment
2:13 am, October 6, 2022
Yakumo_2020 replied to I found a way to prevent Steam from updating the game October 10, 2022 @ 12:46:42 am PDT
Thanks for the tip. I'll give it a try.___ I just figured out how to prevent Steam from updating Valheim unless I want it to. I was able to get a backup of Valheim version .209.10 working again and Steam can't update it.
tl:dr : I changed ownership of the Valheim folders so the Steam client running as a non privileged user can not delete, change, replace any files in the Valheim folder. The save files are in a dirrecnt directory and unaffected.
Sadly this does not fix the curent issues with the last 2 updates unless you happen to have a backup of the Valheim folder from before things went FUBAR. (you do make backups of the game folders before installing mods right?)
This is a Linux solution. I don't know if this is even possible with the newer versions of Windows. Last ver I worked with was 7
The games version will remain locked until ownership of the files is changed back to original settings
Note that this will cause issues connecting to servers running newer versions of the game.
details for the fellow techies :D
As root in the
~/.steam/debian-installation/steamapps/common
directory I used
'/bin/chown -R root:staff Valheim'
to recursivly change the ownership all files in the Valheim directory to owner:root and group:staff. This ownership:group setting allows non root users to execute the game files but not change them.
EDIT
I realized recently that Just setting the files to read only would probably work too, and is a possible solution in a Windows environment
Dunno if you fixed it yet but here's my solution and it's fixed Valheim *twice* now that it's crashed with updates.
Use the latest Glorious Eggroll as your Proton version whenever Valheim updates. It's worth a try and both time I had screen crashing that wouldn't let me in the game, GE fixed it with no hassles (and I had tried every fix I could find for days)
Save your worlds/chars in a file on your desktop or wherever and sometimes one or the other will load back in.
Hope that helps. Dunno about servers but this may work for those who solo play.
I already use GE-Proton version for my non-Steam version of Final Fantasy XIV so it is a name I trust :)
Thanks again. Good hunting o7
8:13 am, October 10, 2022
0 comments
0 likes
GeekGranny replied to I found a way to prevent Steam from updating the game October 9, 2022 @ 9:33:23 am PDT
___ I just figured out how to prevent Steam from updating Valheim unless I want it to. I was able to get a backup of Valheim version .209.10 working again and Steam can't update it.
tl:dr : I changed ownership of the Valheim folders so the Steam client running as a non privileged user can not delete, change, replace any files in the Valheim folder. The save files are in a dirrecnt directory and unaffected.
Sadly this does not fix the curent issues with the last 2 updates unless you happen to have a backup of the Valheim folder from before things went FUBAR. (you do make backups of the game folders before installing mods right?)
This is a Linux solution. I don't know if this is even possible with the newer versions of Windows. Last ver I worked with was 7
The games version will remain locked until ownership of the files is changed back to original settings
Note that this will cause issues connecting to servers running newer versions of the game.
details for the fellow techies :D
As root in the
~/.steam/debian-installation/steamapps/common
directory I used
'/bin/chown -R root:staff Valheim'
to recursivly change the ownership all files in the Valheim directory to owner:root and group:staff. This ownership:group setting allows non root users to execute the game files but not change them.
EDIT
I realized recently that Just setting the files to read only would probably work too, and is a possible solution in a Windows environment
Dunno if you fixed it yet but here's my solution and it's fixed Valheim *twice* now that it's crashed with updates.
Use the latest Glorious Eggroll as your Proton version whenever Valheim updates. It's worth a try and both time I had screen crashing that wouldn't let me in the game, GE fixed it with no hassles (and I had tried every fix I could find for days)
Save your worlds/chars in a file on your desktop or wherever and sometimes one or the other will load back in.
Hope that helps. Dunno about servers but this may work for those who solo play.
5:13 pm, October 9, 2022
0 comments
0 likes
Yakumo_2020 replied to I found a way to prevent Steam from updating the game October 6, 2022 @ 8:35:25 pm PDT
Good tip to know but I'm not sure that will work all the time, Valheim on Linux uses Steam for some of it's Internet functions. On my Devuan GNULinux system I can't start Valheim directly unless the Steam client is already running. There is an easier way that takes much less effort.
Set Steam to only update on launch.
Next go into your install folder and pull a shortcut of the Application/EXE to desktop.
Use that to launch the game and profit
That simple 3 step process for any game on Steam. Still have to have Steam running but it starts from the install and bypasses Steam. Been doing that for years. Used that on at least 3-4 different games.
Thanks for contributing
11:13 am, October 7, 2022
0 comments
0 likes
Whiplash711 replied to I found a way to prevent Steam from updating the game October 6, 2022 @ 7:48:55 am PDT
There is an easier way that takes much less effort.
Set Steam to only update on launch.
Next go into your install folder and pull a shortcut of the Application/EXE to desktop.
Use that to launch the game and profit
That simple 3 step process for any game on Steam. Still have to have Steam running but it starts from the install and bypasses Steam. Been doing that for years. Used that on at least 3-4 different games.
Set Steam to only update on launch.
Next go into your install folder and pull a shortcut of the Application/EXE to desktop.
Use that to launch the game and profit
That simple 3 step process for any game on Steam. Still have to have Steam running but it starts from the install and bypasses Steam. Been doing that for years. Used that on at least 3-4 different games.
8:13 pm, October 6, 2022
0 comments
0 likes
ling.speed replied to I found a way to prevent Steam from updating the game October 6, 2022 @ 4:39:19 am PDT
Havent done this in few years, but last time it was easy to have both old and new version of a game through "appmanifest" files. You just need to make steam think it has all the updates in there (best would be to have a manifest file from when the patch you are trying to run was "live" as guideline).
The only real limit was that to change patch you needed to restart steam and move/rename one of the manifest files (without one steam wont see the game files).
For bigger games its even better than steams own beta tool as it wont download anything every time.
The only real limit was that to change patch you needed to restart steam and move/rename one of the manifest files (without one steam wont see the game files).
For bigger games its even better than steams own beta tool as it wont download anything every time.
2:13 pm, October 6, 2022
0 comments
0 likes