Valve introduces the Steam Deck
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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
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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.
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@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.