Steamをインストール
ログイン
|
言語
简体中文(簡体字中国語)
繁體中文(繁体字中国語)
한국어 (韓国語)
ไทย (タイ語)
български (ブルガリア語)
Čeština(チェコ語)
Dansk (デンマーク語)
Deutsch (ドイツ語)
English (英語)
Español - España (スペイン語 - スペイン)
Español - Latinoamérica (スペイン語 - ラテンアメリカ)
Ελληνικά (ギリシャ語)
Français (フランス語)
Italiano (イタリア語)
Bahasa Indonesia(インドネシア語)
Magyar(ハンガリー語)
Nederlands (オランダ語)
Norsk (ノルウェー語)
Polski (ポーランド語)
Português(ポルトガル語-ポルトガル)
Português - Brasil (ポルトガル語 - ブラジル)
Română(ルーマニア語)
Русский (ロシア語)
Suomi (フィンランド語)
Svenska (スウェーデン語)
Türkçe (トルコ語)
Tiếng Việt (ベトナム語)
Українська (ウクライナ語)
翻訳の問題を報告
Steam installs your games in your Steam folder (on a folder called 'steamapps') by default. But you can set up a library on a different space on your drive.
You can see it in your client preferences -> storage
https://www.nvidia.com/en-us/geforce-now/
https://store.steampowered.com/remoteplay
Downloaded.
Find the game on the left side of your library. Right click and "Manage" then "Browse local files." This will take you to where the game is installed.
Same games also keep other files in different areas, so depending on what you need to modify, you may need to look elsewhere.
NVIDIA GeForce Now is basically a bunch of computers with NVIDIA graphics cards that have a wide variety of Steam games preinstalled and you can borrow one to play any Steam game you own that's in their list of supported games. Developers can add their games to that list by checking a box in the Steam admin panel. There are other services that do similar things. I've been contacted by a few asking if they can put my (free) game on their systems and it got to the point where I made an FAQ article about it[developer.reactivedrop.com].
Stadia's problem was that they were trying to own every part of the system, made some unbelievable claims, and (because it's a Google project) shut down entirely after about a year. Other streaming services are just selling access to a computer to play your games on, so if they shut down all you lose access to is that computer, not your games library.