How can I tell Steam to put games on another disk?
They are currently on C: but I'm getting a little short on space.
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Sign up to join this communitySteam now natively offers an easy way to move a game from one drive to another.
First, you must create a "Steam Library Folder" on your new drive, by navigating to Settings > Downloads > Steam Library Folders
and clicking Add Library Folder. I recommend creating a new folder on the drive called 'Steam Library' or similar to use as your library folder.
Next, for the game that you wish to move, right-click on it in the games list and navigate to Properties > Local Files > Move Install Folder
. Select the newly-created steam library folder from the drop-down list, and hit Move Folder to move the game to the other drive.
This process may take a while to complete, depending on the size of the game and the speed of your drives. Once the game has been moved, Steam may perform a quick "Download" (which actually downloads little or no data), presumably to verify the game files.
Steam installs to the following folder by default:
C:\Program Files\Steam
Files for games installed on Steam are stored in the following folder:
C:\Program Files\Steam\SteamApps\
During the installation of Steam, you have the option to install Steam to a location other than the default. Since Steam relies on the game files residing in the SteamApps folder, your game files cannot be moved outside of this folder. The game files must be in the SteamApps folder in order to function.
If Steam is already installed, you may move the installation to another location, such as a different hard drive using the following process.
Moving Your Steam Installation Important:
Please ensure that you have your Steam account name and password before following this procedure. Also ensure that your account is linked to your current email address so that you can reset your password if necessary.
It is not recommended that you install Steam to an external hard drive due to potential performance issues. Warning:
It is highly recommended that you create a backup of your SteamApps folder before attempting this process. If there is a problem in this process and you do not have a backup of your games or the SteamApps folder, it will be necessary to reinstall the games individually. Please see the Using the Steam Backup Feature topic.
Steam will briefly update and then you will be ready to play. All future game content will be downloaded to the new folder (D:\Games\Steam\SteamApps\ in this example)
If you encounter any errors during the move process or when Steam is launched from the new location, it may be necessary to perform a more thorough process:
Important:
If you are moving your Steam installation to a new hard drive and want to keep game saves/profiles for third party games that are not saved on Steam Cloud most of these can be found in your Documents folder: ~\Documents[username]\My Games. Moving this folder to the same location on your new hard drive will maintain your saves/profiles.
If you're using win 7 or win vista you can use the Symbolic link functionality and create a transparent shortcut.
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc753194%28WS.10%29.aspx
so you'd go
CD C:\program files\steam
mklink /D steamapps e:\steamapps
or so
p.s. if in vista you need to run cmd as an admin
Steam now allows you to have multiple libraries, so you can have one for each drive. Unfortunately, it doesn't have a built-in way to move a game from one library folder to another (except deleting it and reinstalling it to a different location, which involves downloading it again). But I've been able to move games manually.
If you haven't yet created a library on the destination drive, you can do that by going to Steam > Settings > Downloads > Steam Library Folders > Add Library Folder.
To move a game from one library to another: (I'll assume you want to move "Game of the Year" from C:\Program Files (x86)\Steam
to D:\Steam
.)
Find out the Steam gameid number for the game you want to move. (You can find this by locating the game's shortcut in the Start menu, right-clicking on it, and selecting Properties. The gameid is the number after steam://rungameid/
in the URL box. Let's say Game of the Year is gameid 1234.)
Exit Steam (make sure its icon is gone from your taskbar)
Find the game you want to move (Game of the Year
) in the C:\Program Files (x86)\Steam\SteamApps\common
folder. Move it to D:\Steam\SteamApps\common
. (Remember that you need to hold down Shift to move files from one drive to another in Windows Explorer. By default, it copies files when crossing drives.)
Find the appmanifest_1234.acf
file (where 1234 is the gameid from step 1) in C:\Program Files (x86)\Steam\SteamApps
and move it to D:\Steam\SteamApps
.
Start Steam. It should automatically realize that "Game of the Year" is now on drive D:.
This doesn't involve symbolic links, so it should work just fine on Windows XP.
I use SteamTool, which is a tool that lets you move some games to another drive.
It's similar to Steam Mover, which was mentioned in another answer.
This is the easiest method with the least amount of work involved:
You can literally copy the entire Steam folder from Program Files
into the new computer. It may ask to update Steam after you log in on the new computer, but all your games will be there.
Try copying everything to an external drive and then pasting into the new drive.
Program Files
onto external driveCongratulations!
NOTE: On 64-bit Windows, the Steam folder is located in
"Program Files (x86)"