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Better than the people selling their reservations, which didn't even include the deck.I don't even have my email yet and they're already showing up in second hand shops (at ridiculous prices) reeeeee
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Didn't they drop those partly because of lack of interest? From the backlog for the SteamDeck I'd guess that isn't as much of an issue. They sold over 100,000 units the first day or two (according to someone who figured out they could get stats, once Valve realized that was open they fixed the leak). Portable game decks have been popular since the 80s/90s whenever the Game Boy came out.My only concern is Valve drops the ball on it- either ending support or not supporting it down the line, no v2, etc. But the Index gives hope they won't EOL this early as they did with Steambox, Steam Controller, Steam Link.... Time will tell on that.
Didn't they drop those partly because of lack of interest? From the backlog for the SteamDeck I'd guess that isn't as much of an issue. They sold over 100,000 units the first day or two (according to someone who figured out they could get stats, once Valve realized that was open they fixed the leak). Portable game decks have been popular since the 80s/90s whenever the Game Boy came out.
This is arguably better than any of them out there just because of how flexible the device is. I know part of the draw for my husband and I was that's a real computer. I don't know if I'll use it for that, but I know my husband will. He recommended my brother-in-law look into these for his kids - they like games and you can't really get a gaming computer any cheaper. Especially if you go with a gaming laptop.
I understand the concern that they'll drop support and obviously we can't see the future, but as far as innovation goes this reminds me of the iPod or the iPhone. A device that's a well, duh once someone has made it.
Even if they end support from their end, its basically a computer like you say so people are free to keep updating things and keep using it (hell the OS is a linux reskin), enthusiasts are still making homebrew for things like the original PSP to this day. That is a niche hobbyist thing but I also think the deck has already opened the floodgates in terms of the wider market. These handheld PCs have been around for a couple of years now but I've seen a big uptick in interest and the other producers have a bunch of models in the works, including more budget oriented models.Didn't they drop those partly because of lack of interest? From the backlog for the SteamDeck I'd guess that isn't as much of an issue. They sold over 100,000 units the first day or two (according to someone who figured out they could get stats, once Valve realized that was open they fixed the leak). Portable game decks have been popular since the 80s/90s whenever the Game Boy came out.
This is arguably better than any of them out there just because of how flexible the device is. I know part of the draw for my husband and I was that's a real computer. I don't know if I'll use it for that, but I know my husband will. He recommended my brother-in-law look into these for his kids - they like games and you can't really get a gaming computer any cheaper. Especially if you go with a gaming laptop.
I understand the concern that they'll drop support and obviously we can't see the future, but as far as innovation goes this reminds me of the iPod or the iPhone. A device that's a well, duh once someone has made it.
Yeah if the projected numbers are at all accurate, there is a definite financial reason to maintain Deck support. And it is a surprisingly open piece of hardware, at least in regards to what software you can put on it. The thing that should kill most of them first is the battery. Hopefully the Deck 2 or whatever is coming out by the time a lot of the batteries start end of lifing.Didn't they drop those partly because of lack of interest? From the backlog for the SteamDeck I'd guess that isn't as much of an issue. They sold over 100,000 units the first day or two (according to someone who figured out they could get stats, once Valve realized that was open they fixed the leak). Portable game decks have been popular since the 80s/90s whenever the Game Boy came out.
This is arguably better than any of them out there just because of how flexible the device is. I know part of the draw for my husband and I was that's a real computer. I don't know if I'll use it for that, but I know my husband will. He recommended my brother-in-law look into these for his kids - they like games and you can't really get a gaming computer any cheaper. Especially if you go with a gaming laptop.
I understand the concern that they'll drop support and obviously we can't see the future, but as far as innovation goes this reminds me of the iPod or the iPhone. A device that's a well, duh once someone has made it.
the steamos on the deck started with steam machines, the controller got superseded by software solutions (with broader hardware support via steam input), same for the steam link which was pretty much always software:My only concern is Valve drops the ball on it- either ending support or not supporting it down the line, no v2, etc. But the Index gives hope they won't EOL this early as they did with Steambox, Steam Controller, Steam Link.... Time will tell on that.
and if you really want a link you can put it on your raspberry: https://help.steampowered.com/en/faqs/view/6424-467A-31D9-C6CBhttps://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.valvesoftware.steamlink
>Updated on Jun 17, 2022
Not to bump a month-old post but the Edge case is even worse than that. It's not an IE rebrand, it's a Chrome reskin. So whatever under-the-hood advantages/differences IE did have are fucking gone, gone, gone. Fuck Edge, it's worse than worthless.Okay, but the average person perfers to use any other web browser. Even to this day, you'd be hard pressed to find anyone that uses internet explorer (or "Microsoft Edge" as it likes to call itself these days) as much as they would Chrome or Firefox. They're just far superior alternatives.
I imagine it'd be the same case for the windows store. Sure, it's there, but why would the average PC player want to use that over Steam?
Fair point on the software side, but good luck right now if a button on your Steam Controller stops working.the steamos on the deck started with steam machines, the controller got superseded by software solutions (with broader hardware support via steam input), same for the steam link which was pretty much always software:
and if you really want a link you can put it on your raspberry: https://help.steampowered.com/en/faqs/view/6424-467A-31D9-C6CB
but yeah, they're all dead, valve really should support them more...
Easy explanation. You're running the game through the Proton compatibility layer, and it gets wrapped from DirectX 9 to Vulkan using DXVK. A common trick to improve GTA IV's performance on Windows is to use DXVK as it has it's own optimizations meant for IV in addition to the base benefit of using Vulkan. And yes, even though DXVK is designed with Linux in mind, it can be used on Windows without a problem as it is still a .dll binary, though DXVK developers do not support using it on Windows.Enjoy it. Been having a great time with mine. For some reason GTA4 runs better on it than my rig.
that was always obvious, and is exactly the same for a dualshock 3 (or any other product out of production). after warranty you're either stuck with fixing it yourself or get a replacement in whatever form.Fair point on the software side, but good luck right now if a button on your Steam Controller stops working.
Edit: a word to English properly.
there's an "IE mode" they've been shilling recently where I assume they just load the old .dlls in a sandbox. I suspect that's mostly for businesses that have custom-built shit that only works properly in IE.Not to bump a month-old post but the Edge case is even worse than that. It's not an IE rebrand, it's a Chrome reskin. So whatever under-the-hood advantages/differences IE did have are fucking gone, gone, gone. Fuck Edge, it's worse than worthless.
Since you Actually have one. How does it perform? Do you sincerely like it?As mentioned earlier in the thread, I've had mine since week 2 deliveries got out. I have played my Deck almost every day since I got it. My S.O. asked if I was going to hold onto it that early or resell- I did have to think about it. But several months down the line, I have no regrets on keeping it (and playing it). The thing has some flaws (notably battery life and screen resolution), but it is still a joy to use. It feels like one of those iconic pieces of hardware, like the original iPod, fruity iMac, C64, NES/Famicom, or 2600. I hope it will be usurped by a v2 with a better screen, faster AMD stack, maybe proper haptics, etc., in a few years, but that's fine. And given the reaction of some devs, this might be the major selling point to end the stupid Epic store exclusivity junk.
Sure now, call me a fanboi or load me up with the fun-time stickers, whatever. I'm playing stuff I haven't touched in my Steam library, in some cases ever; and the emulation is great (up to PS3 era; and of course Nintendo is really not even to that in terms of CPU power).
My only concern is Valve drops the ball on it- either ending support or not supporting it down the line, no v2, etc. But the Index gives hope they won't EOL this early as they did with Steambox, Steam Controller, Steam Link.... Time will tell on that.
I got mine finally. I really like it. It boots fast, the feel in the hands is perfect, the playable games work really well with the controls (this is my first experience playing with a controller since the Nintendo was first released).Since you Actually have one. How does it perform? Do you sincerely like it?
Probably some repeat with my earlier post, but it's been a few months. I do like it, use it almost daily going on 3+ months now? (however long it's been.) It holds well in my hands, it is in terms of controls better than the steam controller and valve's VR controller (note, I have only used a friend's VR headset, didn't make that jump).Since you Actually have one. How does it perform? Do you sincerely like it?
The resolution is my biggest bugaboo, but pretty much only because PC games tend to have even smaller text than consoles. Even if you have very good eyesight, the text can get so small it aliases, making it just crappy and uncomfortable.If I could change any couple of things about it? Full HD resolution (instead of 720p (ok technically 1280x800 or whatever), better battery, or at least a way to swap out batteries.
Nothing yet has standardized grip buttons, and there probably won't be anything for a while, considering how they only show up on a few controllers. I really like them, though. On my Steam controller, for shooters, I got used to using LG for crouching and RG for jumping. Since those are normally mapped to A and B respectively, but your right thumb also controls the camera on the right trackpad, the grips help alleviate that. I also use L5 for my speedup button in Retroarch.Right now, the battery is technically user changeable, but you're not going to be hot swapping it, and a swappable one would add bulk. To me, the bulk would be worth it. The steam button and option buttons suck, and I'm not 100% sold on the r/l 4/5 buttons (the underside triggers). The button feels isn't a deal breaker. Oh, and I wish the included power supply had a longer cord.