====Goldberg Steam Emulator====
An emulator that supports LAN multiplayer without steam.
https://gitlab.com/Mr_Goldberg/goldberg_emulator
How to use:
- Replace the
steam_api(64).dll
(Windows) orlibsteam_api.so
(Linux) from the game with the emu. - Use the command line tool
generate_emu_config
to generate thesteam_settings
folder - Use the command line tool
generate_interfaces
to generate the filesteam_interfaces.txt
,
then move it inside the foldersteam_settings
- Move the entire folder
steam_settings
beside the emu .dll/.so.
Mr.Goldberg's note:
If the game has DRM (other than steamworks) you need to remove/crack it first.
Saves location:
- On Windows:
C:\Users\<Your windows user name>\AppData\Roaming\Goldberg SteamEmu Saves\
- On Linux:
- if
XDG_DATA_HOME
is defined:
$XDG_DATA_HOME/Goldberg SteamEmu Saves/
- Otherwise:
$HOME/.local/share/Goldberg SteamEmu Saves/
- if
In the settings folder in that save location you will find 3 files (if you have used the emulator at least once): account_name.txt (Edit this file to change your name) listen_port.txt (Edit this file if you want to change the UDP/TCP port the emulator listens on (You should probably not change this because everyone needs to use the same port or you won't find yourselves on the network)) user_steam_id.txt (this is where your steam id is saved, you can change it (if your saves for a game are locked to a specific steam id see below for a way to change it on a per game basis) but it has to be valid) language.txt (Edit this to change the language the emulator will report to the game, default is english, it must be a valid steam language name or the game might have weird behaviour (list provided at the end of this readme))
Note that these are global so you won't have to change them for each game. For game unique stuff (stats and remote storage) a folder is created with the appid of the game. If you want to change your steam_id on a per game basis, simply create a settings folder in the game unique directory (Full path: C:\Users<Your windows user name>\AppData\Roaming\Goldberg SteamEmu Saves<appid>\settings) In that settings folder create a user_steam_id.txt file that contains the valid steam id that you want to use for that game only.
You can also make the emu ignore certain global settings by using a force_account_name.txt, force_language.txt, force_listen_port.txt or force_steamid.txt that you put in the \steam_settings\ folder. See the steam_settings.EXAMPLE folder for an example.
If for some reason you want it to save in the game directory you can create a file named local_save.txt right beside steam_api(64).dll (libsteam_api.so on linux) The only thing that file should contain is the name of the save directory. This can be useful if you want to use different global settings like a different account name or steam id for a particular game. Note that this save directory will be beside where the emu dll (or .so) is which may not be the same as the game path.
DLC:
By default the emulator will try to unlock all DLCs (by returning true when the game calls the BIsDlcInstalled()
function).
If the game uses the other function you will need to provide a list of DLCs to my emulator.
To do this first create a steam_settings
folder right beside where you put my emulator.
In this folder, put a DLC.txt
file. (path will be <path where my emu lib is>\steam_settings\DLC.txt
)
If the DLC file is present, the emulator will only unlock the DLCs in that file. If the file is empty all DLCs will be locked.
The contents of this file are:
appid=DLC name
See the steam_settings.EXAMPLE folder for an example.
Languages:
You can include a steam_settings\supported_languages.txt
file with a list of languages that the game supports.
If the global emu language setting is not in this list of languages, the emu will default to the first language in the list.
See the steam_settings.EXAMPLE
folder for an example.
Depots:
This is pretty rare but some games might use depot ids to see if dlcs are installed.
You can provide a list of installed depots to the game with a steam_settings\depots.txt
file.
See the steam_settings.EXAMPLE
folder for an example.
Subscribed Groups:
Some games like payday 2 check which groups you are subscribed in and unlock things based on that.
You can provide a list of subscribed groups to the game with a steam_settings\subscribed_groups.txt
file.
See steam_settings.EXAMPLE\subscribed_groups.EXAMPLE.txt
for an example for payday 2.
Subscribed Groups (Clans):
Some games like counter-strike check which groups you are subscribed in and allow you to choose a group clan.
You can provide a list of subscribed group ids, names, and tags to the game with a steam_settings\subscribed_groups_clans.txt
file.
Group ids must be valid and can be obtained by pasting '/memberslistxml/?xml=1
' at the end of a Steam group page.
See steam_settings.EXAMPLE\subscribed_groups_clans.EXAMPLE.txt
for an example.
App paths:
Some rare games might need to be provided one or more paths to app ids.
For example the path to where a dlc is installed.
This sets the paths returned by the Steam_Apps::GetAppInstallDir
function.
See steam_settings.EXAMPLE\app_paths.EXAMPLE.txt
for an example.
This file should be put here: <path where my emu lib is>\steam_settings\app_paths.txt
Note that paths are treated as relative paths from where the steam_api dll is located.
Mods:
Put your mods in the steam_settings\mods\
folder.
Mod data folder must be a number corresponding to the file id of the mod.
See the steam_settings.EXAMPLE
folder for an example.
Steam appid:
Put your steam_appid.txt
in the steam_settings
folder because this is where the emulator checks first.
If there is no steam_appid.txt
in the steam_settings
folder it will try opening it from the run path of the game.
If one isn't there it will try to load it from beside my steam api dll.
The steam appid can also be set using the SteamAppId
or SteamGameId
env variables (this is how real steam tells games what their appid is).
But it is highly recommended to always create this file inside steam_settings
folder
Offline mode:
Some games that connect to online servers might only work if the steam emu behaves like steam is in offline mode.
If you need this, create offline.txt
file in the steam_settings
folder.
Disable networking:
If you want to disable all the networking functionality of the emu, you can create a disable_networking.txt
file in the steam_settings
folder.
This will of course break all the networking functionality so games that use networking related functionality like lobbies or those that launch a server in the background will not work.
Custom Broadcast IPOs:
If you want to set custom ips (or domains) which the emulator will send broadcast packets to, make a list of them, one on each line in: Goldberg SteamEmu Saves\settings\custom_broadcasts.txt
If the custom IPs/domains are specific for one game only you can put the custom_broadcasts.txt
in the steam_settings
folder.
An example is provided in steam_settings.EXAMPLE\custom_broadcasts.EXAMPLE.txt
Achievements, Items or Inventory:
Create a file named items.json
and/or achievements.json
inside the steam_settings
folder which will contain every item/achievement you want to have in your game.
An example can be found in steam_settings.EXAMPLE
that works with Killing Floor 2.
The items.json
syntax is simple, you SHOULD validate your .json
file before trying to run your game or you won't have any item in your inventory.
Just look for "online json validator" on your web brower to valide your file.
You can use https://steamdb.info/ to list items and attributes they have and put them into your .json, you can also use the command line tool generate_emu_config
.
Keep in mind that some item are not valid to have in your inventory.
For example, in PayDay2 all items below item_id
50000
will make your game crash.
items.json
should contain all the item definitions for the game,default_items.json
is the quantity of each item that you want a user to have initially in their inventory. By default the user will have no items.
It is recommended to use the command line tool generate_emu_config
for that matter
Leaderboards:
By default the emulator assumes all leaderboards queried by the game FindLeaderboard()
exist and creates them with the most common options (sort method descending, display type numeric).
In some games this default behavior doesn't work and so you may need to tweak which leaderboards the game sees.
To do that, you can put a leaderboards.txt
file in the steam_settings
folder.
An empty leaderboards.txt
makes the emu behave as if any leaderboard queried by the game using FindLeaderboard()
does not exist.
The format is:
LEADERBOARD_NAME=sort method=display type
For the sort methods:
- 0 = none
- 1 = ascending
- 2 = descending
For the display type
- 0 = none
- 1 = numeric
- 2 = time seconds
- 3 = milliseconds
An example can be found in steam_settings.EXAMPLE
Stats:
By default this emulators assumes all stats do not exist unless they have been written once by the game.
This works for the majority of games but some games might read a stat for the first time
and expect a default value to be read when doing so.
To set the type for each stat along with the default value, put a stats.txt
file in the steam_settings
folder.
The format is:
STAT_NAME=type=default value
The type can be
- int
- float
- avgrate
The default value is simply a number that represents the default value for the stat.
You can use the command line tool generate_emu_config
to generate a stats config
Build id:
Add a steam_settings\build_id.txt
with the build id if the game doesn't show the correct build id and you want the emu to give it the correct one.
An example can be found in steam_settings.EXAMPLE
SteamHTTP:
Add a steam_settings\http
folder.
The folder should contain the domain name and path to the files that will be returned by steamHTTP like so For example this url: `https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page`
:
- Create a folder
steam_settings\http\en.wikipedia.org\wiki\Main_Page
- The
Main_Page
file would contain the data returned by the steamHTTP api when it tries to access:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page
An example that was made for payday 2 can be found in steam_settings.EXAMPLE
To allow external downloads which will be stored in this steam_settings\http
folder copy the disable_lan_only.txt
file to the steam_settings
folder.
Avatar:
Copy a PNG
or JPG
image to your Goldberg SteamEmu Settings\settings
folder and name it account_avatar
You can also set a default profile picture for users who are missing one by copying a similar file called account_avatar_default
You can find example in steam_settings.EXAMPLE
Support for CPY steam_api(64).dll cracks:
See the build in the experimental folder.
Notes:
You must all be on the same LAN for it to work.
IMPORTANT:
Do not run more than one steam game with the same appid at the same time on the same computer with my emu or there might be network issues (dedicated servers should be fine though).
Overlay:
Note: at the moment this feature is only enabled in the windows experimental builds
The overlay can be disabled by putting a file named disable_overlay.txt
in the steam_settings
folder.
This is for games that depend on the steam overlay to let people join multiplayer games.
Use SHIFT-TAB
to open the overlay.
Controller:
Note: at the moment this feature is only enabled in the windows experimental builds and the linux builds
SteamController/SteamInput support is limited to XInput controllers.
If your controller is not XInput, there are many tools (at least for windows) that you can use to make it emulate an XInput one.
Steam uses things called action sets for controller configuration. An action set is a group of action names.
Action names are bound to buttons, triggers or joysticks.
The emulator needs to know for each action set, which button is linked to which action name.
Create a ACTION_SET_NAME.txt
file in the steam_settings\controller
folder for every action set the game uses.
To see an example for the game Crystar see: steam_settings.EXAMPLE\controller.EXAMPLE
In the action set txt files the format is:
- For digital actions (buttons, on or off):
ACTION_NAME=BUTTON_NAME
- For analog actions (joysticks, triggers):
ACTION_NAME=ANALOG_NAME=input source mode
Actions can be bound to more than one button by separating the buttons with, like this:
ACTION_NAME=A,B
You can use the command line tool generate_emu_config
to generate a config file.
Or if you want to configure a game yourself, find the xbox360 or xbox one vdf
file for the game and you should be able to figure things out.
For example to get the vdf file for the game Crystar: https://steamdb.info/app/981750/config/
If you look at: steamcontrollerconfigdetails
, you will see something like: 1779660455/controller_type: controller_xbox360
1779660455
refers to a file id that you can dl using your favorite steam workshop downloader site.
The url would be: https://steamcommunity.com/sharedfiles/filedetails/?id=1779660455
The glyphs directory contains some glyphs for the controller buttons for the games that use the GetGlyphForActionOrigin()
function.
If you want to use the real steam glyphs instead of the free ones in the example directory copy them from: <Steam Directory>\tenfoot\resource\images\library\controller\api
folder.
Valid digital button names:
- DUP
- DDOWN
- DLEFT
- DRIGHT
- START
- BACK
- LSTICK
- RSTICK
- LBUMPER
- RBUMPER
- A
- B
- X
- Y
- DLTRIGGER (emulated buttons, the joy ones are used by games in menus for example. When the game wants to know if the trigger is pressed without the intensity)
- DRTRIGGER
- DLJOYUP
- DLJOYDOWN
- DLJOYLEFT
- DLJOYRIGHT
- DRJOYUP
- DRJOYDOWN
- DRJOYLEFT
- DRJOYRIGHT
Valid analog names:
- LTRIGGER
- RTRIGGER
- LJOY
- RJOY
- DPAD
Auth token (app ticket):
By default the emu will send the old token format for various APIs, like:
Steam_GameServer::GetAuthSessionTicket()
Steam_User::GetAuthSessionTicket()
Steam_User::GetAuthTicketForWebApi()
You can make the emu generate new ticket data, and additionally the GC token.
Check the relevant files new_app_ticket.txt
and gc_token.txt
in the steam_settings
folder
Branch name and type:
By default the emu will report a non-beta
branch with the name public
when the game calls Steam_Apps::GetCurrentBetaName()
Check the relevant files is_beta_branch.txt
and force_branch_name.txt
in the steam_settings
folder
List of valid steam languages:
- arabic
- bulgarian
- schinese
- tchinese
- czech
- danish
- dutch
- english
- finnish
- french
- german
- greek
- hungarian
- italian
- japanese
- koreana
- norwegian
- polish
- portuguese
- brazilian
- romanian
- russian
- spanish
- latam
- swedish
- thai
- turkish
- ukrainian
- vietnamese
More configurations:
Due to the various changes and additions, it became tedious to document everything,
so it is recommended to check each example file in the steam_settings
folder.