However, going into the properties menu and forcing compatibility to Proton Experimental allowed it to run properly. Summary: Upon first start on initial install, I was able to get the config menu, but the game would not start itself. Result: Works - 60fps/1280x800p - Proton Experimental. Once past that, the game ran perfectly, although I noticed slowdown occurred when taking damage with a lot of rings, although once again, that may just be a quirk of the emulation in general. Summary: The same as Sonic 1 and Sonic 2, due to being apart of the same collection - the game won't launch past the SEGA screen upon initial start-up, but going into the properties of the game on the Deck and forcing the compatibility to use Proton Experimental will allow it to run properly. Sonic the Hedgehog 3 & Knuckles (SEGA Mega Drive Collection Ver.): Once again, the game generally ran perfectly, barring issues that seem to just be a result of the emulation itself (IE - slowdown). However, as previously stated - going into the Deck's properties for the game, and forcing the compatibility to Proton Experimental allowed the game to launch with no issues. Summary: As with Sonic 1, attempting to launch the collection out of the box with no changes simply resulted in a black screen following the SEGA logo. Sonic the Hedgehog 2 (SEGA Mega Drive Collection Ver.): Result: Works - 60fps/1280x800p - Proton Experimental. However, otherwise it worked perfectly, reporting 60fps at max resolution on Deck. However, as this is the emulated version of the game, it comes with the regular downfalls of the original, such as slowdown and the like. However, by going into the properties menu of the game, and forcing the compatibility to use Proton Experimental, the game immediately worked. Summary: Upon first install of the game, I had no luck - the SEGA logo would come up, however after that was a black screen. Sonic the Hedgehog (SEGA Mega Drive Collection Ver.): That's why I decided for the sake of reporting it for anyone curious - I'd test all of the Sonic games I can (which is all of them barring Origins) and report how they run, how to get harder games to run, and if anything doesn't. However, a thing I've noted is that Steam's verification system isn't very accurate, claiming that a lot of games that can run perfectly fine on the console won't be able to. So recently, I finally got ahold of my Steam Deck and for the last few days, I've been testing a lot of games, both verified and not verified.
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