
- #STEAM VR GAMMA CONTROL INSTALL#
- #STEAM VR GAMMA CONTROL DRIVERS#
- #STEAM VR GAMMA CONTROL UPDATE#
- #STEAM VR GAMMA CONTROL DRIVER#
#STEAM VR GAMMA CONTROL DRIVER#
(Requires NVIDIA driver version 441, or higher)

#STEAM VR GAMMA CONTROL UPDATE#
The update marks a trend of steady improvements to SteamVR, including a recent update which overhauled the platform’s irksome audio management.
#STEAM VR GAMMA CONTROL INSTALL#
If you want to try it out ahead of time, you can install the SteamVR beta branch by right-clicking on SteamVR in Steam and going to the ‘Betas’ tap and selecting the beta branch from the dropdown menu. Valve notes that “the new SteamVR settings are still a work in progress,” so we can expect to see more changes before the beta gets pushed out to the public branch of SteamVR.
#STEAM VR GAMMA CONTROL DRIVERS#
The update has also brought minor tweaks to the SteamVR Dashboard (the in-VR menu), including improvements for Desktop View with multiple monitors.Īdditionally, the update allows users to further increase the brightness of Index, as well as change the headset’s refresh rate without restarting SteamVR (so long as the headset has been updated to the latest firmware and users are using NVIDIA GPU drivers of version 441 or higher).

This will hopefully reduce instances where players need to remove the headset to make small tweaks like adjusting Motion Smoothing, Render Resolution, or Audio Mirroring. Of equal importance, Valve says that “most” settings can now be accessed both inside and outside of the headset. In addition to modernizing the look and feel of the Settings menu, some settings are now hidden by default and can only be seen when toggling on the ‘Advanced Settings’ option, which also reveals a sub-menu of developer-specific options.

Original Article (December 12th, 2019), Updated: As Valve prepares for the debut of Half-Life: Alyx and an influx of new VR users alongside it, the company is also evolving SteamVR to be more user friendly.Īn update to SteamVR (1.9.13) has overhauled the Settings menu, moving it away from a developer-centric power-tool toward something more approachable to end-users. We’ve updated the article below to reflect the move from beta to public release, and included the full changelog for reference. Update (December 17th, 2019): Valve today pushed the SteamVR 1.9.13 update out of beta and into the main branch, making it the public version of the software which will be downloaded by all users. An update to SteamVR has brought a slew of interface changes which aim to improve ease-of-use and address the software’s dense array of settings.
