Valve's Steam Deck also champions the right to repair. Many improve the Steam Deck's usability and versatility, such as Lutris – a consolidated UI for all your game launchers and emulators should you choose to branch out from playing solely Steam games. The Deck touts a totally open platform that gives smarter people than I the chance to develop helpful apps, which you can just pick up for free around the web. That means if you're any good at coding, or at least following instructions and jamming other people's code into the right command console, you can customise the operating system to your heart's content. Since the Steam Deck is a Linux-based machine, with it you get all the benefits of an Arch Linux system. Steam Deck review: Upgradability, versatility and customisation However, you could buy the 64GB model with eMMC storage and upgrade that to an SSD yourself if you're feeling extra invested in doing so (a reader wrote in who has done this very thing, so it is possible). This is the model I'm recommending, purely as the benefits of the more expensive model are mostly aesthetic. The exclusive Steam Community profile bundle also comes with the mid-range model, and honestly there's no reason to go up higher than the 256GB. The list of exclusive additions includes a special colour logo on your carrying case (woohoo), although you still get essentially the same case with every model: a Steam Community profile bundle, which is simply some cosmetics for your Steam profile and an exclusive virtual keyboard theme that's actually quite funky (see image above). The major advantage for those opting for the more expensive 512GB model is the anti-glare etched glass screen, which is great for taking the Deck out in the sun. So let's get into this Steam Deck review to reveal the good, the bad and the other about this handheld console. The kind of urges that a Nintendo Switch cannot always satisfy. Namely: RPG players, action-adventure and side-scroller enthusiasts, indie gamers, and petrol heads faced with the daily monotony of riding on public transport. All so that we can more actively ignore said world, and get on with grinding for XP in our favourite, far-off worlds, while catching some real-life rays of sunshine.Īlthough the Steam Deck is not one for the ultra-competitive gamer, you'll see soon enough that it lends itself to certain genres, as well as those who rock a certain lifestyle. With it, we can take our precious PC games and so much more out into the world, in a supremely practical form factor. Since many of us have been confined to our quarters, stuck in our best gaming chairs, for what has felt like aeons, Steam Deck has swooped in to satisfy a growing urge. The Steam Deck is a portable, Linux-based gaming device that couldn't have arrived at a more appropriate time (well, if you can even find one to buy, at T3 we waited agggges to get hold of one).
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