This is one is very confusing, which probably speaks to the current UI in Heroic. I just want to say, run this game in gamescope, so I can use HDR.
I have the latest version of Heroic, installed via Flatpak as the devs recommend. If I go to configure the game in the UI it has an entire settings page dedicated to Gamescope but nothing that says “enable gamescope”.
Anyone get this working?
You have to install the
org.freedesktop.Platform.VulkanLayer.gamescope
flatpak package. You’ll be given a choice of which version: HGL needs 23.08.https://github.com/Heroic-Games-Launcher/HeroicGamesLauncher/issues/3323
Keep in mind that Flatpak apps are sandboxed and don’t have full access to the system, including other installed applications and libraries.
Thanks! I actually have that installed already.
How do I tell Heroic to launch the game under gamescope vs the normal compositor?
It’s weird. You have to check the “enable upscaling” box, then set “Game Width” and “Game Height”, but leave “Upscale {Width,Height}” empty.
I wouldn’t have thought to try that, thanks. Can confirm it looks like it is running Gamescope now. However I am still not getting an HDR switch in Alan Wake 2.
Getting the following errors:
“CreateSwapchainKHR: Creating swapchain for non-Gamescope swapchain. Hooking has failed somewhere! You may have a bad Vulkan layer interfering. Press OK to try to power through this error, or Cancel to stop.”
“QueuePresentKHR: Attempting to present to a non-hooked swapchain. Hooking has failed somewhere! You may have a bad Vulkan layer interfering. Press OK to try to power through this error, or Cancel to stop.”
I don’t use HDR so I’m of limited help there. You’ll have to pass those options using the “Additional Options” field. Run
gamescope --help
and look for relevant options. Also remember that HDR support on Linux is still primitive.Got it working, added to
-f --hdr-enabled
to the Additional Options section under the upscale options in the Gamescope tab. Note that you need to have upscape ticked even with additional options added.Unfortunately it looks washed out and awful.
Edit: Just a quick note for folks this later on - it does indeed seem Flatpak related, or at the very least I got similar results under the Steam flatpak trying to run game in HDR. I ended installing the native package Steam and lo and behold, HDR no longer looks as washed out, though it still looks a little off compared to Windows. Those swapchains errors I was getting also vanish.
Unfortunately it looks washed out and awful.
That tends to happen when HDR is not supported somewhere in the pipeline from the game renderer to the monitor. It’s not a standard Wayland feature, most compositors only have experimental or WIP implementations, and X11 is never getting it. You’ll also have to use the perfect settings to make it look any good.
When I said “primitive”, I really meant “sharpened stick” primitive.
It could also be Flatpak’s sandboxing messing it up, so maybe try running the game through Lutris. The existing installation should work fine.
gamescope is a mess inside of Flatpak as of right now. Some issue with using Proton inside of gamescope inside of Flatpak.
I played Alan Wake 2 using the native Heroic version and native gamescope.
The gamescope version still needs to be pretty recent. After starting the game make sure its brightness does not change when you play with the SDR intensity slider. If it does, it’s not using HDR.
Also, Alan Wake is a pretty bleak looking game in general so you might want to pop some flares to bring some color for testing.
Ah - thanks for the heads up about the Flatpak version. I have everything running in Flatpak, Steam as well, so that may be why I’ve had zero luck with HDR.
I believe only plasma 6 has support for HDR, and it requires additional config to enable it with games. Otherwise, it will look washed out as you found.
Alternatively, you can use
gamescope-session
which is basically running gamescope as a standalone like the steam deck.Yeah I was running the game under Plasma 6 with HDR enabled and inside a game scope container.
Sounds like there are some issues with Flatpak and HDR so that may be what I am hitting.
What additional configuration are you referring to?
I just add it to and launch it through Steam…
What GPU you are running? If it’s not a recent AMD gpu, that might be the cause. Relatively recent Mesa and kernel would be a good idea too. The flatpak situation could complicate that too, as others have mentioned.
Monitors/displays can sometimes be temperamental too, and require toggling on/off, switching VTs back and forth, etc.
Beyond that, I’d try installing standard Steam if possible.
GPU is Radeon 7900xtx, so pretty new.
I may switch back to distro Steam. I was trying to get as much Flatpaked as possible but getting HDR working is more important to me.