• frezik@midwest.social
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    6 days ago

    They got the formula right on this space:

    • Linux, not Windows–Windows provides little that can’t be done on Linux in this space
    • AMD, not Intel–AMD just has better products at this level (any level at this point, really)
    • 720p–going higher doesn’t provide much at this size except suck battery life and requiring a more powerful GPU
    • Price

    Now, price is partially because Valve can afford to subsidize the cost and expect to make it up on Steam sales. I’d be remiss to ignore how they’re making their money. Still, they’re also able to have a good price because they didn’t try to make it as powerful as it could be, but as powerful as it needed to be.

  • garretble@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    Now that it has been three years, while I’d like to have one, I feel like I’ll just wait until whatever the next version is - even if that means waiting another year or so.

    I don’t need one, particularly, and I don’t want to be caught at the tail end of this hardware.

    • odelik@lemmy.today
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      15 hours ago

      I was on the fence of asking for one for my birthday late last year for exactly this reason.

      What tipped me over was that I took a look at my Steam library and realized I literally have hundreds of indie and AA games that I’ve never played or have less than 4 hours in that I always meant to go back to. And that was it, I decided the Steam Deck was going to be my indie gaming experince platform. It has been amazing at doing this, and I’ve been chewing through my indie game library like crazy, and have picked up so many more that I’m loving gaming again! I can see myself keeping the current steam deck around and will be used regularly for at least the next 5 years.

      If you’re looking for a portable machine that’ll tackle most modern & higher end games, either look at the alternative SteamOS portables or wait for the next Steam Deck (the touch screen, D-Pad, Sticks, and dual touch pad make it the best choice for best I out options for game compatibility).

      However, if you want a great machine for indies, AA, older AAA titles, and console EMU, the current hardware is amazing and worth the price

  • Wooki@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    handheld pc gaming

    Sounds impressive until you see the qualifier

    pc

    Not that impressive.

    Compare it to the whole handheld gaming market!

    • TheresNodiee@lemm.ee
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      6 days ago

      The whole handheld gaming market is pretty small. There’s the Switch which outsold the last couple gens of Xboxes and PlayStations. Good luck beating that. Besides that you have smartphones which just about everyone owns and only a handful of brands being especially popular. Then you have dedicated Android having handhelds and handheld emulation machines which are extremely niche.

      So either you’re looking at extremely popular and widely owned handheld devices with extensive histories and customer loyalty or extremely niche devices. Not really a great comparison.

      • Wooki@lemmy.world
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        4 days ago

        the whole handheld gaming market is pretty small

        Wat!

        Sourced from wikipedia: switch has sold over 150 million units.

        150 million

        small

            • TheresNodiee@lemm.ee
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              21 hours ago

              Ok and? What’s your point?

              I’m just saying there’s not much competition in the handheld space. Either you have massively popular products with an extensive history or extremely niche devices. The handheld PC market is still fairly nascent and Steam Deck dominating it and popularizing it so much (even if it’s not that much compared to, say, the Switch) is still significant.