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Considering a steam deck

I’ve been considering purchasing a steam deck. My pc is in my office, which limits interaction with the rest of the family if I want to play anything. I’ve tried playing mobile games, but just can’t get use to the controls. Think it’s worth getting one?

55 comments
  • Worth it 100% for me, I love mine. I didn't think I would use it much, I honestly bought it initially to just support the project and help FOSS friendly hardware and software.

    But once I started playing on it, I fell in love. I play lots of indie games and smaller studio games, like Brotato, Hollow Knight, Battle for Wesnoth, Core Keeper. I also installed RetroArch and play all of my favorite Game Boy games. I play Old School Runescape with my friend, some kart racing games, some fighting games.

    I also have Jellyfin installed on there, so I use it docked to my TV as a box for streaming from my Jellyfin server to my TV for movie nights. Discord runs pretty well on it in the background, so it works well for group party games like Pummel Party with my friends. Also games like Table Top simulator to play DnD, and virtual board games.

    Idk, it's just a perfect device for me. Super moddable, repair friendly, FOSS friendly, powerful enough to play most games without issue, works with every kind of Bluetooth device I've tested it with, controllers, headphones, etc. And now that it's been out for well over a year, all of the most severe and annoying bugs have been fixed, so the general experience is very smooth and stable.

  • It's been really great for me with that exact use case. I want to play some more intensive games but would still like to hang around in the living room. My wife and I both have one, we can play games alone or together and also hang out on the couch and watch something.

  • I've barely used my desktop for gaming since I got the Steam Deck last May. It's been great for playing on the go, or just sitting on the couch and gaming while my partner watches a show. Definitely recommend.

  • I love my Steam Deck. I do a lot of gaming on my regular PC. But I appreciate my Deck when I'm on the go. It's a great portable gaming device and all the games I'm interested in have worked fine.

    What might be beneficial to know in your face, since you have your family and want to be close is the "suspend" feature. In the middle of a PC game, you can simple click the power button to Suspend the game and when you're done, just turn it back on and you'll be right where you left it.

  • It's actually so great. It isn't the most powerful system but you can play most of the top games from the past decade at 60 fps and the more recent unoptimized games could potentially get a patch via proton to make them enjoyable before official updates (elden ring was an example of this).

    The basic user can enjoy most of games that don't suck on steam without any effort or issues. Couch and bed gaming friendly, fairly easy to pack with included carry case, decent battery life, and will work as a desktop in a pinch with a usbc dock/hub.

    With willingness to use the Linux desktop mode you can do a bunch of extra stuff:

    protonup via built in app store (discover) to get proton-ge for largely increased game compatibility and performance, ymmv by game. It also has steam tinker launcher which enables much more tweaking to the benefit of modding and cheat/trainers among other things. (As a working adult I totally support cheats in single player games since ain't nobody got time for grinding)

    cryotools for more performance improvements

    heroic, lutris, bottles, probably others. stores other than steam, games not from stores, programs that aren't even games, etc.

    emudeck for basically every emulator mostly preconfigured. BYOB, that means bring your own baby bios. Yuzu pineapple etc will require further intervention.

    steam deck refresh rate unlock for what it says. under and overclock. mine flickers at 30fps/30hz but my brother's doesn't. 70fps/70hz works for me too on games the system has enough power for.

    steamos btrfs for more game storage via compression. I recommend only on the microsd. The odd game that has mods that mysteriously bug out usually works by making the correctly located and named folder for it on the ext4 system drive and toggling case folding before installing normally (can only toggle empty folders). I actually just delete and redownload because I have a steam cache server. btrfs doesn't have case folding.

    If you aren't scared of opening it up, or drive reimaging, and can get an authentic and reasonably priced 2230 nvme, I recommend getting the base model and putting in the larger nvme. Just slide the wrapper off the old one and put it on the new one. Also get the gulikit hall effect sticks off AliExpress. It's basically necessary for jank ass minigame inputs like FF7R darts... They just released the new version that supports both stick types. My brother has the 512 and the screen difference is negligible, and nonexistent if you put a tempered glass screen protector which I can see no reason not to do.

    tl;dr: great as is, so much extra great stuff if you are a Linux nut or willing to follow guides.

  • I love mine. I used it as a remote PC for 2 years on my skoolie bus conversion. If your work is compatible with linux and don't need a lot of intense specs (or can cloud all the heavy labor), then you'll be just fine.

  • I bought it last year, and I could not have been happier. It is awesome. Although I also have a gaming laptop, I reach for Steam Deck more often - it's because of it being a hand held.

    The moment that there will be a next version of Steam Deck, I am ordering it.

  • i love my steam deck. i havea similar same issue where i now work from home and dont want to spend any more time at my desk than i have to. The controls are fantastic, it also is the most comfortable grip ive ever experienced on any hand held or controller. The only down side is that it's not the greatest for strategy games like civ that really lend themselves to keyboard and mouse. shooters, action/adventure games, and rpgs. it runs emulators really well also.

  • I can speak to exactly the issue you're having, you've got a family hanging out, you don't want to be all cooped in the office.

    Get a steam deck dude. Do it. I work from home, my wife does too. We have an 8 year old. Not only do I get more gaming time in with my deck than I ever could previously, they're both happier about it. I can suspend power and do whatever, etc, it isn't an anchor at a desk.

    And it can play the games. Keep in mind that steam themselves is very picky about their "this is great on the deck" blessing. There's a ton of games they only say will run, and even more they say won't run at all, that operate perfectly fine. More every month too, as Proton continues development.

    You can also load all your GoG and Epic games easily, heroic launcher.

    Seriously, get one. The mid or basic version is fine, sd cards are fine.

  • I’ve never been a PC gamer (mainly cause I have always been in the Apple ecosystem), but have always wanted to get into it. Have felt like I’ve been missing out a lot.

    I’ve considered a Steam Deck, because I’ve heard so many great things, including that it’s helped reignite passions for gaming in many people! But my concern is that I already am so busy and struggle to find time to sit down and game with my Switch or Xbox…I don’t know if getting a Steam Deck would even really make much of a difference in helping me play more at this point. Could be a pretty costly investment for myself if I don’t end up using it a ton.

    Anyway, that’s my two cents. If you are gaming regularly and want to be able to do more “mobile” PC gaming, it’s probably a good option!

    • My biggest barrier to playing games is only having short windows to play games, or not knowing how much time I have before I'll have to stop.

      Steam Deck is great for me because of it's sleep function works in the middle of nearly every game (few exceptions are some online games that kick you from the session if you DC).

      Thanks to sleep working mid game I can grab the deck, start playing in seconds, and stop again instantly when I need to without having to save/exit.

      It's turned a lot of times where I would normally just look at my phone into short but productive play sessions.

  • Not only does it work well for Steam games, it’s also really convenient for streaming PlayStation and Xbox games.

  • I think it is worth but it comes down to what games you currently play. I'd check to see how well your current games work on the Deck.

  • The Steam Deck is a great device.

    Connecting it to a Gamepad and TV or Monitor is also possible.

  • Yes it's worth it, exactly for the reason you state. You can play it while also being in the same room with other people. Sure, not always being the best companion but when your spouse is watching a series you are still around.

  • @Johnpwrinkle Well worth it. It can handle quite a bit locally, and can stream from steam on your main pc (or be set up to several cloud services).

  • Non-Steam games can be a bit of a pain, and the biggest issue for me is the lack of native Game Pass support.

    Otherwise, it's been fantastic for me. Performance is way better than specifications might suggest, so it's not like you're limited to simple games.

    The best thing is being able to game in bed.

55 comments