Logitech's G HUB is .. a good Configuration Software wich is missing some fundamental things.
One of them, is the abillity to detect Steam games wich are installed on diffrent drives/libary.
- latest Windows 10 update.
- latest Steam
- other libary must placed on a drive wich is large enough to hold all your games. (written 03.10.2021)
Important: With this Workaround you're (mostly) unable to install games on the C:/
Drive anymore,
as we're gonna link that folder to the other drive.
This workaround is based on the possibility of so-called symbolic hard links.
Ruffo:
I'm gonna use my external path in the example.
So just replaceD:\10_Steam\SteamLibary
with your external libary path.
- Move games and more from
C:
toD:
.` - Quit Steam, and ensure Steam is not running anymore.
- Open FileExlorer (
WIN + E
), navigate to your external libary. - Rename it to anything else. Example:
D:\10_Steam\SteamLibary
=>D:\10_Steam\SteamLibary1
- Open Steam. Check under settings if the libary got removed.
- Quit Steam, and ensure Steam is not running anymore.
- (optional) Rename your external Steam Libary folder back to
SteamLibary
- Navigate to your Steam installation folder. (for me:
C:\Program Files (x86)\Steam
) - Copy the whole
steamapps
folder from Steam to your new Libary. - Rename
C:\Program Files (x86)\Steam\steamapps
toC:\Program Files (x86)\Steam\steamapps_
(backup) - Open PowerShell as Admin. (right klick on WIN-Menu in Taskbar => PowerShell (Administrator))
- Run the following command:
New-Item -Path "C:\Program Files (x86)\Steam\steamapps" -ItemType HardLink -Value "D:\10_Steam\SteamLibary\steamapps"
- Start steam. re-add the external libary. Make the external one the default one.
- This is required, because otherwise steam would not install new games if there is not enough space on C: left for the game.