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posted by janrinok on Monday February 28 2022, @11:37PM   Printer-friendly

For Linux Enthusiasts Especially, The Steam Deck Is An Incredible & Fun Device

The most fun and promising Linux-powered gaming device for the masses though is launching today: Valve's Steam Deck. I've been fortunate to be testing out this Arch Linux derived handheld game console the past month and it has been working out very well -- both as a portable Steam gaming device but making it even more compelling from the Linux enthusiast angle is its "developer mode" that effectively turns it into a general Linux handheld and also being free to load your own Linux distribution of choice.

[...] [The] much anticipated Valve handheld gaming computer that features a 7-inch 1280 x 800 display, gaming-optimized controls, 16GB of LPDDR5 memory, 64GB to 512GB of storage depending on model, and is powered by a custom AMD APU. The AMD APU is made up of four Zen 2 cores (8 threads) and an AMD RDNA2 GPU with 8 compute units.

[...] On the software side, the Steam Deck is using SteamOS 3.0 that in turn is based on Arch Linux. SteamOS 3.0 is a complete overhaul compared to Valve's prior SteamOS work that is based on Debian GNU/Linux. SteamOS 3.0 with Arch Linux is much more fast-moving and has been seeing near-daily updates in preparation for launch.

Steam Deck.

See also:
Valve releases Steam Deck handheld PC to select few
Steam Deck review: it's not ready
The Steam Deck is already the emulation system of my dreams
Steam Deck: The comprehensive Ars Technica review
Steam Deck Review: Valve's Handheld Has Big PC Energy
Gabe Newell talks Steam Deck, crypto risks and why the PC industry "won't tolerate" closed platforms
Developers praise the Steam Deck: 'It just works, for real'
Valve Steam Deck Hardware Review & Analysis: Thermals, Noise, Power, & Gaming Benchmarks (Gamers Nexus, 35m30s video)
Steam Deck Tear-Down: Build Quality, Disassembly, & VRM Analysis (Gamers Nexus, 34m24s video)
Steam Deck 1-Month Review: SteamOS Difficulties, Software, & User Experience (Gamers Nexus, 34m28s video)

Previously: Steam Deck is Valve's Switch-Like Portable PC: Starting at $399 this December
AMD + Valve Working on New Linux CPU Performance Scaling Design
Valve's Upcoming Steam Deck Will be Based on Arch Linux--Not Debian
Valve Shares New Steam Deck Details; Launch Delayed to February


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday March 01 2022, @06:21AM (3 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday March 01 2022, @06:21AM (#1225795)

    yes, would be interesting to know if the htc vive works and what "vr ready-ness" the steam-own test program would report? anyone run that yet? *big-eyes-pls*

  • (Score: 2) by Freeman on Tuesday March 01 2022, @04:05PM (2 children)

    by Freeman (732) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday March 01 2022, @04:05PM (#1225869) Journal

    I have an HTC-Vive, but don't own a Steam Deck. My guess is that SteamVR would "work", but most games would have issues. Even, if the hardware could run it. As my foray into SteamVR + Linux was a very lack luster experience. I may give it another try eventually, but I'm not that interested in spending my free time, doing work.

    --
    Joshua 1:9 "Be strong and of a good courage; be not afraid, neither be thou dismayed: for the Lord thy God is with thee"
    • (Score: 2) by takyon on Tuesday March 01 2022, @05:39PM (1 child)

      by takyon (881) <takyonNO@SPAMsoylentnews.org> on Tuesday March 01 2022, @05:39PM (#1225901) Journal

      Valve On Steam Deck VR: ‘Technically’ Possible, But Not Optimized [uploadvr.com]

      Gabe Newell: Steam Deck A ‘Stepping Stone’ To ‘High Performance’ Standalone VR [uploadvr.com]

      “One of the things [Deck] represents is battery-capable, high-performance horsepower that eventually you could use in VR applications as well. You can take the PC and build something that is much more transportable. We’re not really there yet, but this is a stepping stone.”

      [...] Despite being less powerful than Steam Deck, [Facebook] Meta’s Quest 2 runs many of the most popular VR titles available on Steam. But this is achieved by requiring each developer to heavily optimize and simplify graphical fidelity. To deliver its own standalone VR system, Valve may need to ask developers to do the same. That could risk fracturing the SteamVR content ecosystem between high end PCs and standalone. That said, Valve could launch a separate store or a subsection of Steam.

      Valve talks Steam Deck 2 plans with hints towards VR support [tomsguide.com]

      My guess is that a Steam Deck 2 could use Zen 4C + RDNA4 on TSMC N4 (optimized "5nm") around 2024, and that they may consider putting that chip in a standalone x86-based VR headset.

      The minor Van Gogh update "Dragon Crest" [notebookcheck.net] will get used in some laptops, if it materializes at all.

      --
      [SIG] 10/28/2017: Soylent Upgrade v14 [soylentnews.org]
      • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday March 01 2022, @07:37PM

        by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday March 01 2022, @07:37PM (#1225936)

        okay ...well ... hmmm... well i guess i am getting old and my opinion on replacing the whole house because one toilet seat cracked is from the history books.
        a bit more serious, maybe, i see the capitalistic appeal of throwing away a perfectly good wonder of modern technology just because "the battery fail" 'cause its welded/glued to everything else.
        in short: pls.don't attach/glue the vr display to the rest. we want options and competition with vr display hardware (tho prolly until its really manstream, the market has consilidated to three or so lcd vr panels factories behind the scenes with the many available "brands" just being stickers and cost-cutting) :(