this post was submitted on 21 Oct 2023
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Well I can explain the latter:
Steam has a very simple but extensive distribution system in that if the client (your machine) has X combination of hardware, it will frequently check for updates to any files the publisher has pushed upstream. The Steam platform has a compilation mechanism to pre-build graphics and shader caches for end-user clients to prevent them from having to do all that work, so when a publisher tweaks something related to graphics, Steam's backend will build distributed versiona of these compiled shareders and textures and make them available to clients to save your local machine from having to do that work itself on update and launch.
You can disable the behavior in the downloads settings from what I remember. I'm sure you can Google get more specific about how you want that handled, but it can be disabled, your local machine will just have to spend more effort to build them itself to satisfy the requirement the game. You're spending more money on your energy bill this way vs just letting the steam client download the pre-built versions.