Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Valve with Steam Big Picture wins salons players


Valve has released the official Big Picture Mode for Steam, the interface to use the platform of the company on large television screens with joypad. To celebrate the new way Valve decided to discount the price of many titles suitable for the controller.

Valve has officially announced the debut of Big Picture, how to take advantage of Steam comfortably on the large TV screens. This new interface, translated into more than 20 languages, allows you to use a joypad (as well as a mouse and a keyboard) to access the Steam online store and community resources without sacrificing the comfort of your living room.

The company says that all games are available on Steam Posson also use the Big Picture mode. In addition, users can access all the files stored on the cloud platform, the contents of the Steam Workshop, the information of your account and all settings in normal mode of Steam.

Obviously the company of Gabe Newell points out that the Big Picture mode incorporates a new browser specifically designed to be viewed on television screens and managed by joypad. In addition, you can access at any time to this program to go online, even during games with your favorite games.

To solve the problem of typing characters without keyboard Valve has created a new mode of entry of letters and numbers. A new feature that has pleasantly surprised everyone used to the virtual keyboard for PS3 and Xbox 360.

Valve has also decided to celebrate the debut of Big Picture with some discounts on more than 30 titles that seem made to be played with the joypad. These deals can save you up to 75% and expire on December 10. Among the titles included you can find Portal 2, Magicka, Mark of the Ninja (also recommended in our top 20 PC games of 2012 that you have to try), and many others.

Meanwhile also purchased the latest wave of games and software approved by the Greenlight program. Games include thirteen titles: Blackspace, Darkfall Unholy Wars, Dawn of Fantasy, Dragon's Lair, Euro Truck Simulator 2, Gear Up, Kinetic Void - Space Adventure, The Light, No Time To Explain, primordial, Sang-Froid: Tales of Werewolves, StarForge and Waking Mars.

On the software side we find six programs: Action! Screen Recorder, Bandicam: Game Recorder, Construct 2, Display Fusion, HitFilm You Need A Budget 2 and 4. This wave of approvals is the first to include software for Steam and Valve has allowed to reach the milestone of 50 titles approved since the debut of Greenlight. Do you plan to buy something? We look forward to playing for the umpteenth time in Dragon's Lair, maybe sitting comfortably in an armchair with the Big Picture Mode.

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