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Valve’s Steam Deck in our hands

Switch-like Steam portable is coming this December


two people playing co-op with two Steam Deck units



The Steam Deck is a new handheld device from Valve for playing PC games on the go, the company announced Thursday. The Nintendo Switch-like device is set for release in December starting at $399.

Previously rumored as the “SteamPal,” the Steam Deck is a portable PC that’s slightly larger than the Nintendo Switch. It features a 7-inch touchscreen, two thumbsticks, a D-pad, and a four-button layout. There are also two trackpads — one on either side of the machine, under the thumbsticks — to allow for increased precision. The Steam Deck has eight triggers on its back: four on the device’s shoulders and four more where the ring and pinky fingers rest.

The Steam Deck will run games from players’ existing Steam libraries. Players will simply log into their account, and their friends and catalog should follow them onto the handheld. The Steam Deck is capable of running PC games on its own hardware, without the power of the cloud. Videos released by Valve show people using the Steam Deck to natively play games such as Baldur’s Gate 3, Crusader Kings 3, Disco Elysium, Hades, and Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order. Players can also purchase a dock that allows the Steam Deck to run on a TV.



Inside, the Steam Deck boasts an accelerated processing unit (APU) built by AMD. Its CPU is based on the company’s Zen 2 microarchitecture and tops out at 3.5 GHz. The GPU contains eight RDNA 2 compute units running at up to 1.6 GHz, delivering peak performance of 1.6 teraflops. The system packs 16 GB of RAM and a microSD card slot, allowing users to expand upon the built-in storage. The Steam Deck’s 7-inch screen is an LCD with a 16:10 aspect ratio and a 60 Hz refresh rate at a 720p resolution of 1280x800. The Steam Deck also features a dual-band 802.11ac Wi-Fi radio — it’s compatible with 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz networks — and Bluetooth 5.0 for controllers, accessories, and (unlike the Switch) audio.


At launch, the Steam Deck will be available in three models with different storage options. Valve says there are no performance differences between the three versions — aside from the speed of the flash memory, which will provide varying read and write speeds.

The $399 base model offers 64 GB of storage in the eMMC format. The next model up costs $529, and packs faster storage courtesy of a 256 GB PCIe 3.0 NVMe SSD; it also comes with an “exclusive Steam Community profile bundle.” The top-tier Steam Deck, at $649, includes a 512 GB NVMe SSD that Valve refers to as “high-speed,” although it is still a PCIe 3.0 drive. In addition, this model’s screen features “premium anti-glare etched glass.” The unit comes with an exclusive carrying case and exclusive virtual keyboard theme, on top of the cheaper models’ bonuses.

Steam users will be able to reserve any of the three Steam Deck models (for a fee) starting at 1 p.m. EDT on Friday, July 16 — as long as they made a purchase on the Steam Store at some point before June 2021. If not, they’ll have to wait until 48 hours later.
 
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Necrokiller

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Apr 16, 2009
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Memory module 4... LMAO

What a resoooooounding success when CerebralTiger is worried about IC temperature testing during "Torture workload".

Goddamn, CerebralTiger is more jealous than I had imagined :ROFLMAO:
 
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CerebralTiger

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Apr 12, 2007
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Islamabad
Holds a behemoth handheld in his hands, claims it isn't too big. That's an approach. Who is this guy anyway? Reminds me of the time Necrokiller used to share Parris' Cyberpunk 2077 impressions 🤣
 

Necrokiller

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Apr 16, 2009
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Posts his tweets when it suits him then proceeds to ask "who is he?" when he gives a differing opinion. That's one approach Mr. ImTheHandheldExpert 🤣
 

Necrokiller

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Apr 16, 2009
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For the Capcom fans out there, straight from a developer who used the device:



This is what *some* people here are totally missing. An 800p 7-inch display has significantly better pixel density than, say, a 32-inch screen running 4K. Series S running Control at 900p wouldn't be so terrible if it was paired with a 900p screen (which do not exist anymore). Most people would be pairing it up with a 1080p (or 4K) display in their setups. Even keeping in mind the typical viewing distance differences, 900p on a typical console setup will look bad. 800p on a native 800p handheld, will not.

There are portable Windows handhelds with higher resolutions, but are also bigger "behemoths" than Steam Deck, with significantly lower battery life and priced twice as high, and with weaker GPUs. Valve has a pretty well balanced and aggressively priced product.
 
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