Arqade Asked by RS86 on April 6, 2021
So I installed Steam + a few games onto a USB hard drive easily enough, and so far everything seems to work fine.
But I’ve read mixed opinions online, many say that it is a bad idea to do such a thing.
Most of the games I play are quite old (mainly Unreal Tournament games) so the speed at which my games run isn’t an issue.
But is there a chance something could ‘mess up’ further down the line and I’ll be back to square one?
Consider the following: The games will load much slower but it will be portable. I for my self wouldn't install the games on a USB hard drive because steam has a cloud service so portability isn't a problem, the only thing that will happen is that your games load way slower so: No, i wouldn't recommend it.
Correct answer by timelessfear on April 6, 2021
I would seriously consider installing Steam itself onto an internal disk, and then creating a library folder on the external disk (and setting it as the default). This would avoid any weirdness by having the Steam app inaccessible when the external disk is not attached. Only the games on the disk become inaccessible when removed (which should be the bulk of the disk usage)
I have a tablet PC, which doesn't have enough storage on the local/internal 'disk' to be able to install (most) games on. Instead I have a steam library folder set up on a micro SD card, to which I install any games I play on it.
Sometimes I need to put a different SD card in there - the games on the SD card just become unavailable, but as soon as I put the steam one back in they appear as installed again.
This also happened when an SSD disk in my PC 'dissapeared' due to a BIOS glitch.
Answered by Smock on April 6, 2021
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