Still happy with my LCD deck. Love this thing. It was my entry point to PC gaming. Before I had a switch and I was certain I would never sell it but when the Steam Deck came out I never used my switch again and eventually sold it.
How was your experience with the Steam Deck as a console gamer? Anything in particular that gave you trouble?Still happy with my LCD deck. Love this thing. It was my entry point to PC gaming. Before I had a switch and I was certain I would never sell it but when the Steam Deck came out I never used my switch again and eventually sold it.
Nope. It's pretty much just like a console. If there was a game that was unsupported for example or I had issues, I just searched it up on youtube. And emulation is crazy easy with emudeck. Mostly it's just install and play.How was your experience with the Steam Deck as a console gamer? Anything in particular that gave you trouble?
Steam Deck is a very interesting device because it is simultaneously appealing to both tinkerers and those who want a simple device to game on. I hope Valve can sort out worldwide distribution and keep a low price for Steam Deck 2 as it has a real chance at becoming a mainstream hit.Had to put off my Steamdeck purchase because my car hates me but I've landed on getting a 512GB OLED model when I save up to get it, already got a screen protector and 512GB SD card and a long list of games I want to play on there! Super excited to get it and tinker with it, been binging videos for the last couple weeks lol.
I'm quite hyped for this, this with SteamOS would be lovely.I’m hoping they expand the Deck concept to other form factors.
The handheld system is definitely the obvious first option, but I’d be interested in seeing other form factors.
A small desktop/under the TV console?
A tablet with kickstand and controller?
A server that lives headless on your network and streams to whatever screen you have?
I think there’s merit in looking into each of these kinds of device.
Once Valve releases SteamOS as a normal Linux distro, you could just simply install it on whatever hardware you want.I'm quite hyped for this, this with SteamOS would be lovely.
Exactly, already psyching myself up to do a shell replacement to match my transparent purple PS5, will probably mess around with a Windows partition and all that as well, very exciting stuff.Steam Deck is a very interesting device because it is simultaneously appealing to both tinkerers and those who want a simple device to game on. I hope Valve can sort out worldwide distribution and keep a low price for Steam Deck 2 as it has a real chance at becoming a mainstream hit.