- Joined
- Apr 30, 2023
You can really easily hook a Steam Deck up to a TV and for a monitor it can use the same USB-C setup you'd use for a laptop. For lower end games I find it preferable in a lot of ways to using a full PC -- the sleep mode is killer, but not tying up my computer & some of the niceties that SteamOS has for "consolizing" PC games help. But they didn't make this experience very good, remember Steam Deck has a 16:10 1280x800 screen so when output to an external display the game needs to support adjusting on the fly to 16:9 and some just don't like doing that. Some don't even like it when you switch from built in controls to an external controller. It's the biggest failing of the platform IMO.But something like a Steam Deck is different. Unless you wanted to hook it up to the TV in the family room I guess that's one thing.
When it does work it's really slick though, I've spent more time than I care to admit playing Civ V (the one from 2010 that doesn't support controllers) using the Steam Deck touchpad mapped to a mouse and swapped over to my monitor / keyboard / mouse when I could be at my desk. The Linux version of that game is somehow less buggy than the later patched Windows version.
3DS and DS before it, as well as Vita and PSP were/are great to use at home but much more usable when you weren't at home. It was very easy to pull one out on a bus, doing that with a full size Switch is silly and a Steam Deck or Switch 2 is even larger. Biggest issue with all of them was that you couldn't swap out to a TV, except PSPgo and I was lucky enough to get a couple docks before they got expensive; for Vita especially it would have been killer.The 3DS is definitely meant to be on the go, with its pedometer (and resulting tokens) and StreetPass and all that. I lost most of my 3DS data in an SD card accident but I think I only had three people with StreetPass and of those one of those was a stranger.