![]() TinyPedal: is an open-source overlay application for racing simulation.By accessing the data that games provide, these apps show more accurate information, or provide extra features that games lack. Thanks to proton, we Linux users finally can live on same level as windows users, almost! In the simracing community there are a plethora of third party apps to enhance the experience of the games like rFactor2. For now is in beta, but the participation is very promising. Thanks to a third party initiative called Low Fuel Motorsport there is now a renewed up trend in concurrent players in the game, thanks to a regular set of daily races with a rating system. In fact, the game works very well since some time, without problems whatsoever in local or online mode. Switching back to that version fixes all the issues. It simply won't register.Īll of this worked well until Proton 6.3-8 and the Experimental version based on it. With previous Proton versions I could setup all the Hatire axes in the game to look around in the cockpit view, now there's some axes that will only work in the positive range, so I can set Z+ to look up but I can't set Z- to look down. I checked that it's working correctly using joytest. The Hatire is configured as a virtual joystick using OpenTrack. Thus my previous profile has stopped working and I have to reconfigure controllers.Īnother thing, and the most critical, is that I can't no longer setup all the axes in the Hatire. Now the hatire is Joy 1 and the wheel is Joy 2. I use a Hatire head tracking device and the wheel controller was Joy 1 and the hatire was Joy 2. The order of the controller devices has changed. I have to set the FFB of the wheel controller to negative, before it would work on the default value: positive. I've found regressions related to controller input with Proton 7.0-1. It would be a good thing if someone took up that job again, because it's very likely that a lot of games that work with Proton, but don't have Force Feedback, would work correctly. ![]() Some time ago there was a project (ff-memless-next) who tried to include these on the kernel, but were finally discontinued: Technically there is no reason why that stuff can't be implemented in user space. There are no other (currently sold) wheels with a force feedback driver although it appears that Feral managed to make support for others on their own. The G920 supports all effects in hardware and all are available in the driver. The logitech wheels (except G920) support spring and damper in hardware, but this is not implemented in the official Linux driver. All other games calculate everything themselves and only use constant force effects. "ETS2 and ATS are the only games I know that use the predefined effects of the force feedback system (spring, damper, inertia, friction and periodic effects). Someone has tested this game with an G920 wheel? This controller has some effects included in the driver that G29, G27 or DFGT don't include. ![]()
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