How To Find, Download And Install Half-Life: Alyx Mods And Custom Maps

Half-Life: Alyx released in March 2020, and ever since then there’s been a pretty active modding scene for the game. If you’re interested in how to find, download and install custom maps and mods for Half-Life: Alyx, via Steam Workshop or otherwise, we’ve got you covered.

Before Valve launched official support for custom Alyx content and added Steam Workshop support, many custom maps required manual downloading and launching. However, the vast majority of Alyx mods are now released and available through Steam Workshop, so that’s the process we’ll be explaining here.

The few Alyx mods that aren’t available through Steam Workshop will usually include their own instructions on how to install and use them, so you can follow each of those mod’s directly. For general Workshop mods though, it will always follow the same general process below.

A warning before you get started: custom Alyx content often uses late-game mechanics, items and characters, and will probably spoil lots of the game, including the ending. Don’t go any further if you haven’t finished the campaign and want to avoid spoilers.

Steam Workshop

The release of the official Steam Workshop modding tools by Valve made mods and custom maps a lot more accessible for everyone. Not only do the tools make the modding process smoother, but they also streamline the installation and start-up process for players. The Workshop tools are incredibly well-integrated with the game, and you can find and install mods and maps entirely within VR if you want to.

Finding Maps and Mods

There are two ways you can browse custom Alyx content in Steam Workshop.

The first is through the Steam client on your computer — if you navigate to Half-Life: Alyx in your Library, a workshop button will be available in the toolbar located below the play button (see image below).

alyx steam workshop button

In the Workshop, you’ll be able to sort by various categories or search to find a specific mod or map. If you want to try anything, just click the green ‘Subscribe’ button and it will download, ready the next time you launch Alyx.

If you want to search for mods and maps from within VR, the process is very similar. Simply launch Half-Life: Alyx and locate the ‘Addons’ menu option (see below). From there, click on ‘Browse Workshop’.

Half-Life Alyx Workshop Addons

This will bring up a Steam VR overlay — click on the listing Half-Life: Alyx and find the Workshop button, just like on the PC client. From there, you can find and subscribe to mods in exactly the same way, but without leaving VR.

If you want to remove a map from your mods and maps list at any time, simply unsubscribe from it in the Steam Workshop.

Launching Maps and Mods

If you’ve subscribed to a Steam Workshop mod or map, it should appear in the ‘Addons’ tab in the Half-Life: Alyx menu. From there, you can toggle which addons you want to turn on and off.

Some Workshop addons are played in their own custom maps, whereas others are modifications that run on top of the original Alyx campaign.

After enabling addons, go to start a new game. Here, you will be able to switch between the ‘original game’ and ‘addon maps’ at the top of the level select screen. If the mod you want to try runs in a custom map, you can launch it here (see image below).

Alyx addon maps

If the addon is a mod to the original game, you can just start any compatible level from the Alyx campaign — just be sure to check that the mod is enabled before you do.

In the event that a mod doesn’t work with one or more Valve chapters from the campaign, the game won’t let you start until the addon is disabled. For example, if a mod is built to work with the entire campaign, you shouldn’t have any problems. But, if it’s built to just work with Chapter 2, you’ll only be able to start Chapter 2 while the addon is enabled.


That should cover finding, downloading and launching custom Half-Life: Alyx mods and maps. What’s your favorite? Let us know in the comments.

This post was originally published April 23, 2020. It was updated on May 18, 2020 and again on October 11, 2021 to account for new information and the latest methods for installing Workshop mods. 

Half-Life: Alyx Included On Steam Top Releases List For March

Valve revealed its monthly Top Releases list for March today, and Half-Life: Alyx made the cut as one of the top 20 titles.

Steam’s Top Releases list doesn’t rank games in order, so all we know is that it’s in the top 20, not where it landed specifically. After a long wait and a huge amount of hype, Valve’s flagship VR title, Half-Life: Alyx, released on March 23. The game is now one of the highest-rated PC games of the year so far on Metacritic, with reviewers’ responses to the game being overwhelmingly positive. If you caught our review, you’ll know that we loved the game too. Here’s a snippet from Jamie’s write-up:

“Alyx is a triumphant return; a stunningly produced, meticulously refined capping off of the past four years of VR learnings. Its 10+ hours of best-in-class combat, evolving level design and, every so often, moments of truly inventive ideas swiftly establishes it as a new benchmark for the platform.

And yet, Alyx leaves you with the lingering suspicion that there is yet more ground to cover, that there’s far more this series and this developer can do with this new set of tools and that this is only the first part of that story.”

Now, almost a month post-launch, Valve announced that Half-Life: Alyx made the list of Top Releases on Steam for March. These games are “measured by the revenue generated during the first two weeks after release” to form a top 20. This means that all games have an equal chance, regardless of whether they release at the beginning or the end of the month. In Alyx’s case, Valve would have counted the game’s revenue from the last week of March and the first week of April.

Given that Alyx released exclusively on PC VR hardware, its inclusion in this list wasn’t guaranteed. That said, another VR exclusive, The Walking Dead: Saints & Sinners, made the list earlier in the year.

Interestingly, the full list also features Black Mesa, a fan-made reimagining of the original Half-Life, available for PC.

Have you played Half-Life: Alyx yet? Let us know what you think in the comments below.

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‘Half-Life: Alyx’ Was Among the Best Selling Steam Games Released in March

Valve today announced the top 20 best selling games on Steam released in March. And coming as little surprise to anyone, Half-Life: Alyx (2020) has made it on the list.

In its monthly top sales list, Valve is accounting for two weeks of sales, which helps put Half-Life: Alyx on more equal footing with the rest of the games released during the entire month of March. However you slice it, making the top 20 on Steam is an achievement for any title, let alone a VR game.

You’ll see plenty of familiar faces below, including Borderlands 3, DOOM Eternal, and Mount & Blade II: Bannerlord. Valve has organized the list according to release date, and not overall revenue as such, so it’s hard to tell where it fits on the list.

That said, on launch day Half-Life: Alyx broke the record for peak concurrent usership of a VR game on Steam at 42,858 players, putting it head and shoulders above the competition for top concurrent users, multiplayer games included.

SEE ALSO
Valve Explains the Deceptively Simple Design Process That Made 'Half-Life: Alyx' Excellent

Although Valve hasn’t released official numbers on how many copies it’s sold to date, SteamSpy estimates there are currently between 500,000 – 1,000,000 owners, putting the game’s revenue at around $25 – $50 million should those numbers at all reflect reality. Even at half that estimation, Half-Life: Alyx is well positioned to be the best selling VR game to date.

March’s Steam Top 20 List

  • Black Mesa – Crowbar Collective
  • Yes, Your Grace – Brave At Night
  • Avorion – Boxelware
  • Ori and the Will of the Wisps – Moon Studios & Xbox Game Studios
  • DJMAX RESPECT V – NEOWIZ
  • Borderlands 3 – Gearbox Software
  • Granblue Fantasy: Versus – Cygames, Inc. & Arc System Works
  • State of Decay 2: Juggernaut Edition – Undead Labs & Xbox Game Studios
  • AI*Shoujo/AI*少女 – ILLUSION
  • DOOM Eternal – id Software
  • Panzer Corps 2 – Flashback Games
  • Half-Life: Alyx – Valve
  • The Legend of Heroes: Trails of Cold Steel III – Nihon Falcom, Engine Software & PH3
  • Bright Memory – FYQD-Studio
  • Idle Champions of the Forgotten Realms – Codename Entertainment
  • Last Oasis – Donkey Crew
  • ONE PIECE: PIRATE WARRIORS 4 – Koei Tecmo
  • One Step From Eden – Thomas Moon Kang
  • Biped – NEXT Studios
  • Mount & Blade II: Bannerlord – TaleWorlds Entertainment

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Modders Enable Half-Life: Alyx Hammer Support Ahead Of Official Release

Community modders found a way to enable support for Half-Life: Alyx assets in Hammer, Valve’s authoring tool, allowing users to create custom playable maps. The method is a workaround solution to facilitate modding and custom level creation until Valve officially supports mods and updates Hammer, as promised last November.

Back when Valve announced Half-Life: Alyx, they also stated that the game would support “community built” environments, alongside an updated version of Hammer to work with VR gameplay and components. However, there’s been no updates since and there’s still no specific release date. We asked Valve for an update about official support and will update this post if we hear back.

Despite the lack of official support, we’ve already seen some awesome mods for Half-Life: Alyx, like the wave shooter mod XenThug. New maps like this have been made possible by way of members of the modding community who have found a way to use Half-Life: Alyx assets in the Hammer editor ahead of the updated release from Valve. After following some instructions, I was able to play around with the tools myself, and place some models in an arrangement I call “Alyx and Friends”, as per the image below.

Half-Life Alyx Hammer

While modders are using this version of Hammer with Alyx support to create awesome stuff, it should be noted that is still a rudimentary community solution with several caveats. What’s possible here is likely not as robust as what we could get with official Valve support.

Nonetheless, if you’re looking to play around with Alyx models in Hammer or want to explore some community maps yourself, you can join the Half-Life: Alyx Modding Hub Discord server. The server contains sections where modders post their own maps, along with guides on how to use Hammer, including how to get it working with Alyx assets.

If you’re just interested in using the modified Hammer with Alyx support, there’s quite a few steps, as outlined in the community guides. You’ll first need to manually replace some of the Alyx game files (we recommend duplicating your entire install of the game beforehand, as doing this on your original install will make it non-playable) to be able to launch an Alyx-compatible version of Hammer. After that, you’ll need to take some more steps in order for Hammer to be able to read the Alyx assets properly. If everything works out, you should be able to open Hammer with the shortcut you created and place Combine soldiers and City 17 buildings to your heart’s content.

It’s clear that the Half-Life: Alyx modding community is already off to an amazing start. The community content we’ve seen already in the month since launch bodes well for the game’s future, even with official tools and an updated Hammer editor still to come.

What mods would you like to see for Half-Life: Alyx? Let us know in the comments below.

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Half-Life: Alyx SteamVR Home Environments Now Available To All Users

Valve launched a new ‘Spring Cleaning’ update for SteamVR today, version 1.11.11, featuring some new upgrades and bug fixes. The update also opens up access to the Half-Life: Alyx SteamVR Home environments which are now available to all users, after a period of exclusivity for Valve Index owners only.

Before Half-Life: Alyx launched last month, two SteamVR home environments, one featuring the streets of City 17 and another featuring Russell’s lab, were available to Index owners a few weeks prior to Alyx’s launch. However, now that the game has been out for almost a month, Valve has made these available to all SteamVR users, regardless of which headset you’re using.

Previously, others could only experience the Alyx environments through a shared SteamVR Home session with an Index owner. However, that was before the game’s release — now that the Alyx cat is out of the Valve bag, City 17 and Russell’s Lab have been fully revealed in-game. The SteamVR Home areas no longer act as sneak peeks, which is probably why they’re no longer exclusive.

The environments may not be quite as detailed as their in-game equivalents, but they’re still pretty impressive nonetheless. A YouTuber even managed to pull themselves through the air ascend to the top of the Citadel in SteamVR Home, giving an interesting look at how Valve put together such expansive environments for Alyx.

Public access for the Alyx environments is just one change listed in the 1.11.11 update for SteamVR, alongside some new features and bug fixes as well. You can read the full change notes here.

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Boneworks Update Adds New Sandbox Maps, Time Trial Course, And More

Boneworks Update 1.4, the [REDACTED] update, is out now on SteamVR for all major PC VR headsets and adds new sandbox maps, a time trial course, and more!

You can located the new [REDCATED] level module in the museum by the reclamation bin, but if you’ve already claimed the museum then you can find it plugged in at the main menu already. According to the Steam update page, the additions and changes include:

  • Greatly Improved Hand Physics (Punching, Climbing, Swinging)
  • New Sandbox Environments
  • New Minigame – Time Trial course
  • New Spawnable Gachapons
  • New Firearm – p350 Handgun
  • Three new original songs
  • Adjustments, Bug Fixes, Performance increases

The three new sandbox maps are the [REDACTED] Chamber, originally known as Test Chamber 04, which was an experimental area the developers used for showing off the project’s physics before it was a proper game. We actually tried a very early demo of Boneworks at GDC a few years ago inside this test chamber. Most of the early development videos were shot here as well.

Then there’s the HandgunBox, which is designed to show off the new handgun balance features; the time trial course is also hidden here. The trial forces you to try and clear the underground map as quickly as possible while jumping and shooting at enemies. The clock is running in real time and slow-mo doesn’t affect it.

Finally, there’s the new Tuscany map, which is a tribute to the very first original Oculus DK1 VR environment featuring a cliff side villa in Tuscany, Italy. Early adopters of VR technology will get a real kick out of that one.

If you get a chance to check out the update, let us know what you think down in the comments below! And don’t forget to read or watch our review of Boneworks and check out this in-depth interview for more on the game.

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Community Download: What Type Of Updates Or DLC Do You Want For Half-Life: Alyx?

Community Download is a weekly discussion-focused articles series published (usually) every Monday in which we pose a single, core question to you all, our readers, in the spirit of fostering discussion and debate. For today’s Community Download, we want to know what sort of DLC or updates you want to see released for Half-Life: Alyx now that it’s been out a couple weeks?


Half-Life: Alyx is one of the biggest and most important VR game releases of all-time. In fact, many of you seem to think it’s the overall best VR game we’ve seen to date. That’s high praise and seems well-earned according to people that have played it. We were huge fans in our review, for example.

Now that Half-Life: Alyx has been out for two weeks, it’s time to look forward to what’s coming next for Valve’s big VR adventure! We don’t have any indication of anything major in the works, but previous Half-Life games received post-launch support in the form of side content, multiplayer releases, and even follow-up mini sequels. And with the state of VR games, it’s common for developers to patch in major features or options after release.

This brings us to our main question: Now that Half-Life: Alyx is officially out, what do you want from the game next? Would you like to see a DLC side story, or some type of update? What about a multiplayer spin-off? Or maybe you’d rather Valve just focus on the next entry in the series to keep the story going instead?

Let us know down in the comments below!

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Half-Life: Alyx & HL2: Episode 2 Co-Writer: ‘I Want To Do More’

Got high hopes for a new Half-Life game following the release of Half-Life: Alyx? So does one of the game’s co-writers.

Speaking in an interview with Fandom, Erik Wolpaw, who also co-wrote Half-Life 2’s two episodic sequels alongside Chet Faliszek, said he wanted to do more. His fellow co-writers seem to agree.

Note: Spoilers for Half-Life: Alyx are included in this post.

“It’s pretty clearly a promise of more to come,” Wolpaw said of Alyx’s insane ending. “I’m only a contractor, I’m not in the decision-making process — but I want to do more. I’m gonna do my darnedest to try and lobby people.”

Co-writer Jay Pinkerton added that the concept of more Half-Life was now “exciting to us, in a way that it wasn’t when we first came on.

“The fact that we have a new story to tell, all these new potential storylines, that’s what makes it so exciting now.”

Alyx’s ending does indeed give the franchise a pretty clear route to go moving forward but, given the series’ history, it’s probably best not to assume any sort of sequel has been confirmed just yet. We’re likely and long way away from being able to confirm that. Plus, there are plenty of other Valve series we’d like to see revived in VR.

Speaking to UploadVR in our own interview, Valve’s Greg Coomer noted that nature of Alyx’s ending could be seen as the developer “issuing a challenge” to other areas of Valve.

And that’s not even considering if any new Half-Life game would be in VR; it’s perfectly possible Valve returns to its roots for the next game. We’ve got our fingers crossed that that won’t be the case, though.

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Half-Life: Alyx On Oculus Quest – How To Play, What You Need And The Best Way To Do It

Half-Life: Alyx is one of the biggest PC VR releases in recent history. However, is it possible to play Valve’s flagship VR title on the Oculus Quest?

The short answer is no — at least not natively via the Quest Store. Half-Life: Alyx is a PC VR game and an intensive one at that, so it’s not available as a native Quest title and there’s almost no chance we’ll see it ported anytime soon.

However, it is possible to play Half-Life: Alyx on the Quest through Oculus Link or Virtual Desktop. Both of these solutions require additional equipment, the most important of which is a VR-ready PC. However, with the right set up, it is possible to play Half-Life: Alyx on the Quest through either service. Here’s how.

Half-Life Alyx Review Embargo

What You Need

Regardless of whether you’re using Oculus Link or Virtual Desktop, you will need a VR-ready PC for either method. In this case, the beefier the better. Not only will the PC need to be VR-ready, but it will also need to meet the minimum specifications for Half-Life: Alyx, which are:

  • Processor: Core i5-7500 / Ryzen 5 1600
  • Memory: 12 GB RAM
  • Graphics: GTX 1060 / RX 580 – 6GB VRAM

You’ll also need to purchase and download a copy of Half-Life: Alyx off of Steam, but you probably already knew that.

Half-Life: Alyx Review

Oculus Link vs Virtual Desktop?

So which will you be using? It’s a difficult choice and both come with pros and cons.

Oculus Link allows you to use a compatible USB-C cord to connect your Quest to a VR-ready PC and play PC VR content. The Oculus Quest, when connected via Link, acts as if it is an Oculus Rift. The benefits of Link are that, with the right equipment, it is very stable and offers very low latency. The downside is that you’re tethered to your computer with a cord at all times.

Virtual Desktop is an application available on the Oculus Store that streams your PC desktop to your Quest, to interact with inside VR. However, if you sideload an alternate version of the app from SideQuest, you can also use it to stream and play PC VR games wirelessly on your Quest.

The major benefit of Virtual Desktop is that it is a wireless solution to play PC VR games on Quest. However, the downside is that the performance of the streamed VR games is highly dependant on the strength of your internal connection between your router, PC and Quest, and it can take a bit of wrangling with settings to find what works for you.

We went hands-on with both Oculus Link and Virtual Desktop and described our experience with both. The bottom line is that we would recommend Oculus Link overall, but depending on your setup and equipment, you might be able to get Virtual Desktop to work well enough as well. Your mileage will vary.

Oculus Link Cords

oculus link cable

If you have a VR-ready PC that also meets the minimum requirements for Half-Life: Alyx, make sure that the PC also meets all compatibility requirements for Oculus Link. Then, the only other physical equipment you’ll need is a USB-C cord that is compatible with Oculus Link.

The easiest option to adopt with the least hassle is the official Oculus Link Cable, available to purchase from Facebook. It is a 5m, fibre optic cable that is relatively thin and provides good flexibility, with USB-C connectors on both ends.

The official cable is pretty much guaranteed to work, provided you have a USB-C port on your computer that is the USB 3.1 Gen 2 standard. If you only have USB-A ports, you’ll need to buy a USB A to C adaptor to use the official cord. Make sure that both the adaptor and the USB-A port on your computer are USB 3.1 Gen 2.

For options other than the official Oculus Link Cable, check out our article on building a USB cable solution that works with Oculus Link.

Setting Up Oculus Link

oculus link image quest

Once you have your Oculus Link cord of choice, you’ll need to make sure you have the Oculus app installed on your PC.

Then, simply plug in your Oculus Quest (while powered on) to your computer using your Link-compatible cord. In the ‘Devices’ tab of the Oculus PC app, you’ll see an option to set up a new headset. Select the option for Oculus Quest.

The app will then run through the Link setup, test your cord and connect and then enable your Quest for use with Oculus Link. Once setup is complete, you can connect your Quest to your PC at any time – your Quest will ask if you want to enable Oculus Link, and from there you can launch SteamVR and play Half-Life: Alyx.

Setting Up Virtual Desktop

First and foremost, you will need to purchase and download Virtual Desktop from the Oculus Store for Quest.

However, the default store version of Virtual Desktop does not allow you to stream games to the headset wirelessly. To do that, you’ll need to sideload an alternate version of the app using SideQuest, which enables the functionality.

If you don’t know how to sideload or use SideQuest, you can check out our guide on the matter here. You can find and install the alternate Virtual Desktop app by searching for it in the ‘Games and Apps’ section of SideQuest. The sideloaded version of Virtual Desktop still checks for a valid app licence, which is why you’ll need to buy the Oculus Store version first.

Once you have the sideloaded version of Virtual Desktop installed, you will also need to install the streamer app on the same PC from which you want to stream Alyx. This is available on the Virtual Desktop website.

With the streaming app installed and opened, enter your Oculus username into the Streamer app’s menu on your PC.

Then, launch Virtual Desktop on your Oculus Quest and enter SteamVR to play Half-Life: Alyx wirelessly.

However, there are some important caveats: Virtual Desktop is not as much of a ‘works-out-of-the-box’ solution as Oculus Link. You’ll likely need to do some tweaking to adjust the performance, visuals and latency.

Some users get great visual fidelity with very low latency through Virtual Desktop, while others struggle to get consistent performance. It will all depend on the quality of you internal connection between your router, PC and Oculus Quest.

Here are some things to check to ensure optimal performance:

  • Make sure that your Quest is connected to a 5Ghz network.
  • Make sure that your PC is connected to your router via ethernet and not Wi-Fi.
  • Try to play as close to your router as possible, with minimal physical interference from walls, furniture and the like.

In our experience, we’ve found your mileage with Virtual Desktop can vary greatly depending on your equipment and setup. There may also be additional steps which we’ve seen recommended by others – such as changing security settings on your router – that may improve you performance even more. You’ll just have to see what’s required for your situation and setup.


That should cover the basics of how to play Half-Life: Alyx on the Oculus Quest using Oculus Link or Virtual Desktop. Any questions? Put them down in the comments and we’ll see if we can help out.

The post Half-Life: Alyx On Oculus Quest – How To Play, What You Need And The Best Way To Do It appeared first on UploadVR.

Half-Life: Alyx On Oculus Quest – How To Play, What You Need And The Best Way To Do It

Half-Life: Alyx is one of the biggest PC VR releases in recent history. However, is it possible to play Valve’s flagship VR title on the Oculus Quest?

The short answer is no — at least not natively via the Quest Store. Half-Life: Alyx is a PC VR game and an intensive one at that, so it’s not available as a native Quest title and there’s almost no chance we’ll see it ported anytime soon.

However, it is possible to play Half-Life: Alyx on the Quest through Oculus Link or Virtual Desktop. Both of these solutions require additional equipment, the most important of which is a VR-ready PC. However, with the right set up, it is possible to play Half-Life: Alyx on the Quest through either service. Here’s how.

Half-Life Alyx Review Embargo

What You Need

Regardless of whether you’re using Oculus Link or Virtual Desktop, you will need a VR-ready PC for either method. In this case, the beefier the better. Not only will the PC need to be VR-ready, but it will also need to meet the minimum specifications for Half-Life: Alyx, which are:

  • Processor: Core i5-7500 / Ryzen 5 1600
  • Memory: 12 GB RAM
  • Graphics: GTX 1060 / RX 580 – 6GB VRAM

You’ll also need to purchase and download a copy of Half-Life: Alyx off of Steam, but you probably already knew that.

Half-Life: Alyx Review

Oculus Link vs Virtual Desktop?

So which will you be using? It’s a difficult choice and both come with pros and cons.

Oculus Link allows you to use a compatible USB-C cord to connect your Quest to a VR-ready PC and play PC VR content. The Oculus Quest, when connected via Link, acts as if it is an Oculus Rift. The benefits of Link are that, with the right equipment, it is very stable and offers very low latency. The downside is that you’re tethered to your computer with a cord at all times.

Virtual Desktop is an application available on the Oculus Store that streams your PC desktop to your Quest, to interact with inside VR. However, if you sideload an alternate version of the app from SideQuest, you can also use it to stream and play PC VR games wirelessly on your Quest.

The major benefit of Virtual Desktop is that it is a wireless solution to play PC VR games on Quest. However, the downside is that the performance of the streamed VR games is highly dependant on the strength of your internal connection between your router, PC and Quest, and it can take a bit of wrangling with settings to find what works for you.

We went hands-on with both Oculus Link and Virtual Desktop and described our experience with both. The bottom line is that we would recommend Oculus Link overall, but depending on your setup and equipment, you might be able to get Virtual Desktop to work well enough as well. Your mileage will vary.

Oculus Link Cords

oculus link cable

If you have a VR-ready PC that also meets the minimum requirements for Half-Life: Alyx, make sure that the PC also meets all compatibility requirements for Oculus Link. Then, the only other physical equipment you’ll need is a USB-C cord that is compatible with Oculus Link.

The easiest option to adopt with the least hassle is the official Oculus Link Cable, available to purchase from Facebook. It is a 5m, fibre optic cable that is relatively thin and provides good flexibility, with USB-C connectors on both ends.

The official cable is pretty much guaranteed to work, provided you have a USB-C port on your computer that is the USB 3.1 Gen 2 standard. If you only have USB-A ports, you’ll need to buy a USB A to C adaptor to use the official cord. Make sure that both the adaptor and the USB-A port on your computer are USB 3.1 Gen 2.

For options other than the official Oculus Link Cable, check out our article on building a USB cable solution that works with Oculus Link.

Setting Up Oculus Link

oculus link image quest

Once you have your Oculus Link cord of choice, you’ll need to make sure you have the Oculus app installed on your PC.

Then, simply plug in your Oculus Quest (while powered on) to your computer using your Link-compatible cord. In the ‘Devices’ tab of the Oculus PC app, you’ll see an option to set up a new headset. Select the option for Oculus Quest.

The app will then run through the Link setup, test your cord and connect and then enable your Quest for use with Oculus Link. Once setup is complete, you can connect your Quest to your PC at any time – your Quest will ask if you want to enable Oculus Link, and from there you can launch SteamVR and play Half-Life: Alyx.

Setting Up Virtual Desktop

First and foremost, you will need to purchase and download Virtual Desktop from the Oculus Store for Quest.

However, the default store version of Virtual Desktop does not allow you to stream games to the headset wirelessly. To do that, you’ll need to sideload an alternate version of the app using SideQuest, which enables the functionality.

If you don’t know how to sideload or use SideQuest, you can check out our guide on the matter here. You can find and install the alternate Virtual Desktop app by searching for it in the ‘Games and Apps’ section of SideQuest. The sideloaded version of Virtual Desktop still checks for a valid app licence, which is why you’ll need to buy the Oculus Store version first.

Once you have the sideloaded version of Virtual Desktop installed, you will also need to install the streamer app on the same PC from which you want to stream Alyx. This is available on the Virtual Desktop website.

With the streaming app installed and opened, enter your Oculus username into the Streamer app’s menu on your PC.

Then, launch Virtual Desktop on your Oculus Quest and enter SteamVR to play Half-Life: Alyx wirelessly.

However, there are some important caveats: Virtual Desktop is not as much of a ‘works-out-of-the-box’ solution as Oculus Link. You’ll likely need to do some tweaking to adjust the performance, visuals and latency.

Some users get great visual fidelity with very low latency through Virtual Desktop, while others struggle to get consistent performance. It will all depend on the quality of you internal connection between your router, PC and Oculus Quest.

Here are some things to check to ensure optimal performance:

  • Make sure that your Quest is connected to a 5Ghz network.
  • Make sure that your PC is connected to your router via ethernet and not Wi-Fi.
  • Try to play as close to your router as possible, with minimal physical interference from walls, furniture and the like.

In our experience, we’ve found your mileage with Virtual Desktop can vary greatly depending on your equipment and setup. There may also be additional steps which we’ve seen recommended by others – such as changing security settings on your router – that may improve you performance even more. You’ll just have to see what’s required for your situation and setup.


That should cover the basics of how to play Half-Life: Alyx on the Oculus Quest using Oculus Link or Virtual Desktop. Any questions? Put them down in the comments and we’ll see if we can help out.

The post Half-Life: Alyx On Oculus Quest – How To Play, What You Need And The Best Way To Do It appeared first on UploadVR.