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Latest Forum Posts
Valve clearly has a good grasp on ergonomics, and sometimes it's just nice to have things matching, and be able to put my money where my mouth is and support a company that's committed to supporting my OS of choice.
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I would argue, at least with the Steam branding, one would assume a guarantee of first class support and integration with Valve products (like the Deck, input support, link, etc)...
If the Deck is successful, hopefully more accessories would be in the pipe. It would serve Valves interest in terms of keeping people on the platform. Although I can certainly understand any hesitanticy as the target audience is prolly really small (Deck users that "living room play" with it docked)
On a side note, for the Decks ergonomics... I really like it, like the controller, they are very comfortable to hold!!
Last edited by denyasis on 20 October 2023 at 10:04 pm UTC
Meh. Sony maintains the upstream Linux driver for their controllers, and Valve have dropped the ball in the past (Index not having 100% functionality on Linux, not testing CS2 on Linux). I'd expect it to be a draw for those two in terms of timeliness and breadth of support. Your 8bitdo, MadCatz, Logitech, and the like are going to only have community support rather than first-party support, it's true.
It wouldn't really be just that market, though; it's the "wanting to play games from Steam without KBM" market. That's laptop gamers, HTPC gamers, and desktop gamers leaning back, more than it is Deck gamers. Valve do have experience in that field, and they do track how many gaming sessions are done worldwide with a controller, so it is a feasible thing for them to go for. But they aren't really a hardware company, and they're going to do as much "making the controller work with Steam" regardless of who a particular controller comes from. "Is this a need that our customers have that isn't being filled by someone else?" is the kind of question Valve would ask to get over their inertia, rather than "can we sell this for more than it takes to make it?" which is the question that a hardware company with existing production lines would ask.