An experimental steam deck plugin that works similarly to an iOS anti-motionsickness feature. Basically it shows dots on the edges of the screen, and moves those dots based on the deck’s internal gyroscope to help your eyes have a movement reference.
The dev is also looking for feedback on how well it works, if you try it out you can submit feedback here or email the dev at astro@n0t.space
This is kinda niche, but it’s the kind of thing that could be a big improvement for people with bad motion sickness issues, so I’m curious if it will work.
How is this the first time I’ve heard of a feature like this… It’s really cool. This basically seems like technology from VR research determining what makes people motion sick and how to work around it. It makes perfect sense it could apply to other screens as well.
Edit: I wish there was more info on it… the implementation seems like it’s proprietary and I can’t find any research papers about it. MuteMotion also seems to be a name used by some sign language translation software.
I love the feature on iPhone and wanted it to be on SteamOS so bad! Didn’t think someone would actually do it, this is great!
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Any instructions? Do you just download the whole repo in desktop mode then run the install script?
I think you just need the install script, and then it will download the plugin.
The dev recommendeds using the command:
curl -sL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/MuteMotion-Tech/MuteMotion-SteamDeck-Shim/main/install.sh | bashWhich just downloads the install script (readable here) and runs it. The script downloads
And extracts it to a new folder in your decky plugin folder, then sets permissions for it, and restarts decky.
The MuteMotion Core Engine algorithms, binaries, and mathematical transformation logic are PROPRIETARY ASSETS of MuteMotion Tech / Adriano Neto and are NOT governed by this license. Access to the Core Engine is restricted and requires separate licensing.
Booooohhhhh!
I tried out the Apple version of that feature on an old iPad I have lying around. It’s cool but really not rocket science to implement. Copying an Apple feature and then acting like they invented it and need to keep the PROPRIETARY ASSTES a secret is beyond lame.
Im interested in this. I may give it a shot. I need something similar for my phone.
iOS has it built in as an accessibility setting apparently, on Android there are multiple apps like KineStop that offer some version of it.
Awesome, downloaded Kine for the next time I might need it
WARNING: Do not simulate driving while sitting on the couch with this by bouncing your phone around. I started getting motion sickness. 😭
I also now wonder… could some sort of smart glasses with AR functionality maybe do the same thing for sea sickness.
+1 on Kinestop. It having a horizon line helped with my motion sickness immensely.







