Valve introduces the Steam Deck
-
It is a portable console powered by a Zen 2 and an RDNA 2 GPU. It will come with SteamOS 3.0 (a distro based on Arch) and KDE Plasma as a desktop environment. Its price starts at €419. -
Steam has just killed the console vs PC debate! If you can connect a screen to a keyboard and mouse, this is the ultimate console
-
Well, well, well. What a surprise Valve has brought us.
There is revealing information in this interview that is summarized in these points:
- It comes with 16gb of RAM
- Storage of between 64 and 512gb depending on models
- 1280x800 16:10 screen
- Battery life of 2 to 8 hours. They say that if you play Portal 2 it lasts 4 hours and if you limit the frames to 30fps it lasts 5 or 6 hours.
- It only has wifi connection. No ethernet or mobile data. Here it falls short
- It works like a normal PC so you can run the entire Steam library that works on Linux
- They will sell a dock-station separately
- It comes with a USB-C port so you can connect an ethernet dongle, hdmi and other peripherals without having to buy the dock station
- It seems to come WITHOUT a headphone jack although it has Bluetooth
- The hardware is not expandable so it looks like the storage, RAM and everything will be soldered to the board.
A hit and I think at a more than reasonable price.
-
@Gallina said in Valve presents the Steam Deck:
Steam has just killed the fight between console and PC gamers! If you can connect it to a screen, a keyboard, and a mouse, this is the ultimate console.
That's very debatable. It's true that it's a PC with the advantages of a console, but it doesn't have the advantages of a PC. Even a low-end laptop has more upgrade possibilities than this.
@palotes said in Valve presents the Steam Deck:
A quick look and I think it's at a more than reasonable price.
Yes, it's true that it has a very attractive price. We'll have to see what the final performance is. In the same interview you linked (by the way, I'm editing your message to put the address as a link) they say that although you can put external screens, the games might not perform as well as expected at resolutions higher than 720p.
I think Valve is going to become a kind of printer manufacturer but with consoles: they sell you the hardware at cost price because what they're interested in is selling you the cartridges (in their case, the games).
I find it a very interesting gadget and honestly, Valve already has a finger in my wallet, but I would wait a bit to see the weak points. With that size and with that battery life, I think the hardware is going to be more limited than it seems at first glance. By the way, if it's true that it doesn't have a headphone jack, that's a big flaw.
Hello! It looks like you're interested in this conversation, but you don't have an account yet.
Getting fed up of having to scroll through the same posts each visit? When you register for an account, you'll always come back to exactly where you were before, and choose to be notified of new replies (either via email, or push notification). You'll also be able to save bookmarks and upvote posts to show your appreciation to other community members.
With your input, this post could be even better 💗
Registrarse Conectarse