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Well today is the big day. Valve has now formally revealed the Steam Deck, a portable handheld gaming console powered by a new version of their Linux-based SteamOS operating system.

"We think Steam Deck gives people another way to play the games they love on a high-performance device at a great price," says Valve founder Gabe Newell. "As a gamer, this is a product I've always wanted. And as a game developer, it's the mobile device I've always wanted for our partners."

Since it's based on Linux, we now know a big reason why Valve has been investing in Linux gaming with the likes of Steam Play Proton. It will play your Linux native titles, with support boosted by Proton. Not only that, Valve said "we're vastly improving Proton's game compatibility and support for anti-cheat solutions by working directly with the vendors". This is pretty amazing, as anti-cheat was the big missing piece. In their FAQ, they make it clear that they are working directly with BattlEye and EAC to get support for Proton.

Anti-cheat support is coming too! That's huge!

The new SteamOS has been optimized for handheld and touchscreen gaming, while it will also have a desktop mode for those who want it. SteamOS 3.0 is also being based upon Arch Linux, with the desktop mode being powered by KDE Plasma.

We also know why Valve has been heavily investing in AMD GPU drivers for Linux too now then. It's a custom APU they partnered with AMD on for Zen 2 + RDNA 2.

Quick specs:

  • Powerful, custom APU developed with AMD
  • Optimized for hand-held gaming
  • Full-sized controls
  • 7" touchscreen
  • WiFi and Bluetooth ready
  • USB-C port for accessories
  • microSD slot for storage expansion
  • 3 different storage options available

The Steam Deck will also have a dock, much like you see with the Nintendo Switch with more ports to play with like USB, wired networking and enabling external displays. More tech info can be seen here.

It's an open system too, since it's basically a PC in your hands. Valve said "you can install third party software and operating systems".

Valve also did a session with IGN where they answered some questions. IGN also has hands-on video to give a better look at the device.

Steam Deck starts at $399, with increased storage options available for $529 and $649. The two higher models have bigger storage space, plus the two higher models actually use an NVMe drive for faster loading time and the top end has an anti-glare screen too.

Reservations open July 16th at 10 AM PDT; shipping is slated to start in December 2021. Currently it's limited to United States, Canada, European Union, and the United Kingdom with more regions becoming available in 2022.

For developers, Valve put up a video overview:

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See more on the Steam Deck website and the Steam Deck store page.

Is this the holy grail of Linux gaming? Could be.

Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
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Eike Jul 16, 2021
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Quoting: GuestMore likely Valve only allowed IGN to look at it if everything reported was favourable, and in return IGN have seen a lot of traffic driven their way. That's not exactly an uncommon arrangement. A critique point is also another trick: it's a critique, but once tried oh everything is perfectly fine and the device is wonderful (you can trust us because we raised a critique). Seen that many, many times before.

That might or might not have been the case here, but I can't see how it justifies a definitive "That's a marketing video."
I'd trust my local game magazine (especially Gamestar) not to do such arrangements, but I don't know much about IGN.

We'll see what the box can do...
dubigrasu Jul 16, 2021
Quoting: Arten
Quoting: DorritWhy do you guys think they went with Arch? Is it for not needing to eventually reinstall a new OS version?
They don't trust canonical after their initial plans to drop 32bit i guess. Arch begun emerging in Valve projects after that (futex), if i remember correctly.

Canonical planning to drop 32bit support with Ubuntu 19.10 onwards

Valve looking to drop support for Ubuntu 19.10 and up due to Canonical's 32bit decision (updated)
They weren't using Ubuntu for SteamOS though, but Debian (stable).
Arten Jul 16, 2021
Quoting: dubigrasu
Quoting: Arten
Quoting: DorritWhy do you guys think they went with Arch? Is it for not needing to eventually reinstall a new OS version?
They don't trust canonical after their initial plans to drop 32bit i guess. Arch begun emerging in Valve projects after that (futex), if i remember correctly.

Canonical planning to drop 32bit support with Ubuntu 19.10 onwards

Valve looking to drop support for Ubuntu 19.10 and up due to Canonical's 32bit decision (updated)
They weren't using Ubuntu for SteamOS though, but Debian (stable).

Ok, my mistake.
Philadelphus Jul 16, 2021
I'm interested enough to put down $5 for a pre-registration tomorrow. A few years ago, I probably wouldn't have been interested—I've never owned a console of any kind and have always felt my self-built beefy Linux-running gaming rig to be sufficient. But the older I get (and hear my friend talk about playing games on his Switch in bed) the more appealing I find the idea of being able to play my Steam library on the couch, or in bed, or on an airplane, or when visiting family for a few weeks over Christmas, or on a train, or…anywhere my desktop can't come with me, basically. Very little of my library is hefty AAA-type games, so the vast majority of it would easily run on these specs without it breaking a sweat. Possibly not all of it would play well without a mouse, but again: I've got a desktop for that (or I could maybe plug in a mouse while traveling). The fact that it's a full-blown PC with the possibility of running other apps on it also makes it more appealing as an entertainment device, allowing it act something like a small laptop (being able to browse the internet over Wi-Fi on its screen instead of on my phone's smaller screen might be nice while traveling, for instance, or possibly streaming games from my desktop that'd be too resource heavy). By the time it's actually available to purchase in December we'll know a lot more about and I can decide if I want to go through with it or get my $5 back.
kokoko3k Jul 16, 2021
Sorry guys if i missed the following, maybe i'm thinking too much positive, but:
Will the battery be replaceable?
sub Jul 16, 2021
Quoting: subHas Rich Geldreich already spilled some hate over this new device?
I mean, his crusade against Valve can't possibly allow him to leave this news uncommented.

Damn, his Twitter account is protected since a few hours.
That's how you create your own bubble.

Will miss the hate.
elmapul Jul 16, 2021
1280 x 800px (16:10 aspect ratio)
i hate 16:10, sigh i prefer 16:9

Connectivity
"Bluetooth
Bluetooth 5.0 (support for controllers, accessories and audio)
Wi-Fi
Dual-band Wi-Fi radio, 2.4GHz and 5GHz, 2 x 2 MIMO, IEEE 802.11a/b/g/n/ac"
no 3g/4g/5g? they are crazy or expect people to pair it with their phone to play on the go?

"Approx. 120 grams"
impressive!


"Once you've logged into Steam Deck, your entire Steam Library shows up, just like any other PC. You'll be able to find your collections and favorites - exactly where you left them."
i doubt all games will work, there is only 4 months for the realse.

and speaking of that, they are sending devkits now? inst a bit too later? i mean, they plan to relase this thing at the end of this year, right?

"It's an open system too, since it's basically a PC in your hands. Valve said "you can install third party software and operating systems""
i saw this movie before, once the government of my country tried to push linux, but everyone installed an pirated version of windows instead.
hopefully things are different now, with more games avaliable for linux than ever, but i'm tired of creating fake hopes.
considering the the base version only have 64GB of storage, running linux on it may actually be the smarth move.
but how many triple a games people will be able to install?
and loading files from an external storage might be too slow, it should have an system with priorities for some files on an device with an realiable loading speed (internal storeage) and other files wich may not be required loading from external storage when/if avaliable.

"Steam Deck starts at $399, with increased storage options available for $529 and $649. "
for an launch price this seems ok, but they need to cut this price to 300 if they want to compete with switch, people really value the price of an device, they gave up purchasing ps4 in favor of xbox one last gen for an 50U$D difference in price, they can do the samething again with this one.

from the ign article:
"Pierre-Loup Griffais: Bem, há uma grande variedade de experiências lá. Demora cerca de 2 a 8 horas,
Portal 2 por quatro horas nele. Se você limitar a 30 FPS, estará jogando por 5 a 6 horas."

2 hours in the worst case scenario? that should not be an option for an brand new battery, imagine on an used one.
and portal2 is an...
ok this thing is target at retro gaming, there are some modern games on it, but it will not least until the end of the generation if you want to play the lastests relases.

i'm afraid that valve didnt learned nothing from steam machines fiasco, at least people seem excited about this one right now.
(and by people i mean the average joe, not linux users)
BielFPs Jul 16, 2021
Quoting: elmapulfrom the ign article:
"Pierre-Loup Griffais: Bem, há uma grande variedade de experiências lá. Demora cerca de 2 a 8 horas,
Portal 2 por quatro horas nele. Se você limitar a 30 FPS, estará jogando por 5 a 6 horas."
Suddenlycaralho
Arehandoro Jul 16, 2021
Something I haven't seen mentioned anywhere is the dock. Will it be included? Will it have hardware on its own to increase performance/fps dramatically or just more power to effectively overclock it like the Switch does?
Ehvis Jul 16, 2021
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Quoting: ArehandoroSomething I haven't seen mentioned anywhere is the dock. Will it be included? Will it have hardware on its own to increase performance/fps dramatically or just more power to effectively overclock it like the Switch does?

It's mentioned on the Steam Deck site that it will be sold separately. In the videos they say that you can also use a generic USB-C dock. No overclocking mentioned, but higher resolutions should be possible as the dock can connect to any external display via DP or HDMI.


Last edited by Ehvis on 16 July 2021 at 3:12 pm UTC
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