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An apparent dispute between Rockstar and Valve has left Grand Theft Auto 5 to be listed as unsupported by Steam Deck.
GTA 5 just became 'Unsupported' on Steam Deck Fans are frustrated with the rating change following the addition of BattlEye anti-cheat, which is incompatible with the Linux-based SteamOS.
GTA V has consistently ranked among the top 20 most-played games on the Steam Deck for at least two years, and it even remained in the top 10 list this week.
Valve has begun refunding GTA V purchases for users playing on Linux and Steam Deck, following issues caused by a new anti-cheat update. The update, introduced by Rockstar to enhance security and… ...
Grand Theft Auto V was one of the top ten most played games on Valve’s Steam Deck handheld this past week. But as of today, Valve now lists the game as “unsupported”.
Steam Deck users express their frustrations with the latest Grand Theft Auto 5 security update as it causes a major issue for GTA Online.
Despite recently removing GTA 5 Online compatibility for Valve's handheld gaming PC, Rockstar is making its games work better on the device.
A new update for Grand Theft Auto Online has left the game in shambles for players on the Steam Deck. Here is what we know so far!
GTA Online's new anti-cheat has at least temporarily ridded servers of invincible modders, but has also locked Steam Deck and Linux players out.
While many games with the BattlEye anti-cheat are playable on Steam Deck thanks to the Proton Compatibility tool, GTA Online's newest update doesn't allow that.
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