• Stingray@reddthat.com
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    1 year ago

    The Steam Deck adds something incredibly valuable that the PC market has never had: a consistent target spec for minimum hardware requirements. Upgrading every couple years would create confusion for which version for developers to focus on. They are treating it like a console, not a PC.

  • Xianshi@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    I’m glad they are not rushing a new one out until there is some genuine leap in the tech. I think we have become accustomed to pointless upgrades every year which offer nothing substantial other than lining some shareholders pockets.

    In my case the longer they take the better 😊

  • Chewy@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 year ago

    That’s good. A Steam Deck 2 might make sense once there’s an APU with double the performance at the same 15W.

    Current APU’s are faster per watt, but only at higher power consumption. This means either the battery life sucks, or the handheld is too heavy and expensive with a giant battery.

    The current handhelds by other manufacturers are faster, but only a bit. 120Hz are nice, but I don’t even reach 60fps on most titles and it consumes too much power. Games might perform a bit better but everything is still also playable on the SD, so there’s no real point in releasing a second generation. All these devices fill the same niche.

    What I expect is a refresh of the SD with an OLED display. Maybe even with VRR and HDR, now that SteamOS has support for it. Farther down the wish list are hall effect joysticks.

  • Lettuce eat lettuce@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I think this is healthy. People (including myself) are easily sucked into consumerism instead of sustainability.

    Better to have a good device that is highly repairable, upgradeable, and modable. That way you can make small improvements and add some high quality accessories without just trying to force everybody to buy the newest shiny device every 18-24 months.

    Unless you’re only playing the latest AAA games, the Deck will perform great for many years to come.

    I got sucked down the hype/consumerism hole for many years after college, and I blew so much money on buying every new PC part and accessory even though I didn’t need any of them.