Valve Steam Deck hands-on: $400 Switch-like portable gaming PC

Valve Steam Deck hands-on: $400 Switch-like portable gaming PC

Hi, this is Wayne again with a topic “Valve Steam Deck hands-on: $400 Switch-like portable gaming PC”.
A funny thing happened. A few years back, i started buying my pc games for the nintendo switch nintendo’s portable became my primary pick for all, but the biggest games, because it’s the place. I would actually finish them. What if there were a pc that i could take with me just as easily on the go? That’S why i flew to bellevue washington this week to valve’s headquarters to see the new steam deck. The steam deck is already sold out through the middle of 2022, and it’s not hard to understand why valve is promising.

Valve Steam Deck hands-on: $400 Switch-like portable gaming PC

You can take your entire steam pc game library with you for roughly the price of an ipad while it might just look like a thicker switch with touch pads. There’S a lot more going on under the hood. It’S got amd’s latest zen, 2 cores and rdna 2 graphics, cores the same kind you’d find in the xbox series x and ps5 just far fewer of them in terms of raw oomph. It’S slightly less than half as powerful as an xbox series, s microsoft’s 300 console, which has to deliver 1440p gameplay to a big screen tv. The steam deck meanwhile only has to deliver 720p to a 7-inch touchscreen like the nintendo switch.

Valve Steam Deck hands-on: $400 Switch-like portable gaming PC

How does that translate to actual games? Well, here’s the witcher 3 running on a nintendo switch, and here it is on a 7-inch iron neo, a windows, gaming portable. It comes in at about 700. Now here it is on the steam deck.

Valve Steam Deck hands-on: $400 Switch-like portable gaming PC

Not only does it easily blow the switch port away, i’m running the widget 3 at medium spec, a whole graphical tier higher than the ineo can manage. Here’S control another seriously demanding game again, managing medium spec, where other portables struggle to run on low i’d, rather max it out. If i could, but it doesn’t feel like it’d, be a gigantic compromise to take games like this on the road. There’S no question about it: the steam deck is a big one, nearly two inches thick at the grips. It weighs half a pound more than the nintendo switch, and it’s not a thing. I’D choose to carry around in my pockets, even though i do wear cargo pants, but it’s also bristling with controls that feel like they’re in the right places, at least for my average sized hands with the bulbous steam controller. I always felt like the grips were digging into the fleshy made of my palms, not so much here i was a little skeptical when i saw the true size of this thing. It’S wide and tall enough.

You can practically fit the entire nintendo switch between its grips, but my fingers just kind of sunk into its ready-made grooves and i think i might already prefer its soft easy triggers and meaty thumbsticks over the tight clicky ones on the switch the smooth tops. The joysticks do feel like they take a little getting used to. I had to rely on their grippy edges to avoid slipping off, but that flat surface houses a pretty neat trick when you touch it or the touchpad beneath you’re tripping a capacitive sensor that activates gyroscopic aiming just tilt to aim. That’S a feature i loved on the playstation, vita and original steam controller, and it only took a tiny bit of doom eternal to convince me.

I’D love it here too, it’s not to say the hardware isn’t without its wrinkles, at least at this early stage valve warned us the ev2 units. We’Re testing aren’t final, build quality and it shows the case had a rough seam and looks like it easily scratches near the charging port. I actually heard something rattling around when i shook one of them and though valve has been remarkably open about battery life, promising four hours of portal 2 on a charge. Our unit got a little warm during our roughly hour and a half demo and looked to be nearly empty by the time we were done. I also don’t know whether i’d really prefer the etched anti-glare screen that ships with the most expensive configuration of the deck it does reduce glare and definitely has a premium silky feel, but like a lot of matte options, it doesn’t feel quite as vibrant as the glossy Display you get at the 400 and 530 dollar price points here. Also we weren’t able to take it outdoors to truly put it to the test.

Okay, let’s talk about the elephant in the room, the steam deck runs. Linux comes with linux in the box. Technically, it’s a version of steam os a new version.

That’Ll also bring some of its new ui features to other versions of steam as well, but it’s linux under the hood linux means it simply won’t run every game in your steam library out of the box. For the majority of games, you’ll be relying on a proton compatibility layer that makes your windows games work. Even then, some of the biggest games like fortnite destiny, 2, apex, legends and pubg, are a question mark.

They rely on any cheat. Software and valve has said it’ll. Try to get it in proton ahead of launch, but it hasn’t said for sure if it’ll work, the good news is the steam deck isn’t locked to linux. If you don’t want it to be, it’s a fully fledged pc.

So if you want to throw windows on there, origin, the epic game store heck. Anything you want to plug into the usbc port that would work on a pc or anything you’d want to connect to the bluetooth chip. I’Ve got a set of bluetooth, earbuds and they’re. Going to work with the steam deck, unlike the nintendo, switch, there’s a lot.

We weren’t able to do on our demo, like installing our own games, swapping multiple sd cards or spending quality time, creating custom controller configurations to make the most of the steam decks touch pads and rear buttons. I wasn’t able to dive through the new steam os as much as i’d like or thoroughly test compatibility, though i did notice that dead cells, typically a pretty easy game to run, felt a bit jerky. I also ran into some bugs that valve warned me. I would like the occasional freeze when stopping or starting apps, apparently valve’s still deciding whether you should be able to swap between more than one game at a time, and this pre-release build doesn’t like it when you try.

But after seeing how well valve built and supported the steam controller, the steam link and the valve index through their life, it’s not hard for me to imagine the wrinkles in these pre-release units getting ironed out valve, believes it’ll, sell millions of steam decks and that it May not be alone suggesting other pc manufacturers may jump on the portable craze too. It’S willing to share its learnings with other companies. The company told me it’s looking to license steam os for free to interested pc manufacturers. Me, i think valve just noticed. The switch was eating into its indie game sales, but i like the idea i bought one myself, we’ll see how it works out. Would you buy a pc gaming portable, like this, knowing it’ll never be quite as powerful as a desktop? Let us know in the comments and thanks for watching .