Not sure if this will work, but it's worked for me in the past with other Steam Link games where the controls were messed up (including with phone controls).
1.) Add "notepad.exe" as a non-Steam game to your Steam library.
2.) Start it via your Steam library through your Steam Link app.
3.) Hit "F1" on your virtual keyboard. This will bring up the "help" page through your default web app, but also allows you to now use your desktop via Steam Link. Just minimize the window and launch Enlisted like you were on your desktop/not on Steam.
FYI, this doesn't always work -- some games with their own dedicated launchers I've had trouble with, but for some reason it circumvents a lot of control wonkiness.
Another option, if you're just using the default Steam apps, is to try using Moonlight. It's an app on Android that allows you to stream your games from desktop to phone remotely, this time using Nvidia's Gamestream technology. I've used it to much greater effect over Steam Link; nowadays, I only use Steam Link or Steam Desktop streaming from computer-to-computer, since Moonlight works better for desktop-to-phone (better quality, decent touch controls, etc.)
>I didn't think the Russians had 20,000 Lewis guns though.
According to Ian Skennerton's book .303 Lewis Machine Gun (Small arms identification series) a book about identifying where a particular lewis gun came from, the Russian Empire acquired 10,000 lewis guns from the British government in 1917, and they purchased an additional 10,000 from Savage Arms based in the US in 1918, though it's not known if all the ones from Savage Arms were actually delivered in the end.
When the Russian civil war broke out, another bulk of some hundreds of lewis guns were acquired by the anti-communist forces to which they used as their main MG throughout the conflict.
It's not known exactly how many the Soviet Union had when ww2 started, but they definitely had a large number of them lying around.
I already posted this when they were first announced so it was easy to link. But I'm sure I can find more if I were to search. I remembered this passage from when I was working on an IS-2 model myself a couple weeks back.
This came from the book "IS-2 heavy tank 1944-73" which was published by Osprey. And in my experience Osprey has been very reliable for this kind of thing.
lmao! Where did my question go!? Anyways, is it possible to use a yoke/wheel for flying in this game? Something like this - https://www.amazon.com/Logitech-Saitek-Flight-Yoke-System/dp/B01M00OQBE