Its not just difficulty. It's about lacking trillion of things and being simply unstable. I've tried Arch once, "good for developers" my ass.
Best explanation is first response to this: https://www.reddit.com/r/linuxmaster...hate_for_arch/
It was also about same time when i tried it. Exchanging debian for arch is simply shoot in the foot. Thats like replacing typical family sedan from 2010 to oldtimer 1960 that was rebuilt with some 3d printed plastic elements.
I've got 2 months to wait & I can barely manage that I really regret picking up a G14 earlier in the year.
I saw this & it's great news as an RTX owner, but the big one I'm really waiting for is Nvidia opening their drivers up... Please? It can happen, right?!
Haha, I'll give it a peak, thanks.
How repairable the buttons/joystics will be I wonder. The buttons/joysticks tend to wear down after years of use. I wish they took a switch like approach where you can replace the controllers.
A genuine concern. Hopefully Valve at the very least will make the parts available further down the line for people who want to attempt a repair out of warranty. The company that takes the idea of the handheld PC & makes one that's fully modular is the one I'll end up with in the long term.
I think people really misjudge how much the Deck is actually competing against the Switch. Whatever the case, seeing pre orders backed up for nearly a year & companies like Epic directly support their storefront competitor by enabling their games to run on their platform shows that there's at least a place for it.
I'm mostly just looking forward to a handheld that I'll have thousands of games ready to go right from day one & feels more like a gaming device than something like a phone with a grip. I used to use a custom 3D printed brackets to connect my phone to a Steam Controller/Xbox Controller, & it just never felt the same.
Im pretty sure you will be able to replace joysticks. Two options, either they used existing component for that (I can't say for sure but most companies use ALPS joysticks)
If that is the case you would be simply able to replace them. If you don't have knowledge/tools yourself, any repair service with soldering tools could do that. Buying that would be easy, at least its super easy where I live.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/333796626085
In this case you won't have to worry about valve making them available as they already are.
OR they designed something new (rather small chance) in which case you will be at mercy of their supplier.
I cannot see the Steam Deck seriously threaten the Switch unless it gets a thriving emulator scene.
The Switch is currently suffering most from anti-consumer practices in regards to older games, if the Steam Deck can run an emulator easily then it could snatch up the players that want to play Pokémon Emerald on the Switch but can't, for instance.
The world revamp dream will never die!
This is so overstated it's crazy. The Steam Machines were an incredible failure, granted, but the groundwork laid by Steam OS 1.0 led to what we have today. The Steam Controller was fantastic & was only discontinued because of a lawsuit with Scuf - People just didn't like it because it wasn't immediately accessible/required some tweaking, & people went in expecting just another 2 stick/one dpad controller for some reason. The Link was great (I still have mine), has had solid support for years, though was made mostly irrelevant by other devices & the mobile link app in recent years. The Index has been the best in class for years, & Valve have done more to support VR than perhaps any other developer out there.
One clear miss with the Steam Machines, one absolute nail on the head with the Index, one misunderstood gem with the Controller, & the Link which was supported for years, still works fine, & lead to the online app doesn't seem like a company with a terrible hardware track record to me - At least nowhere near as terrible as people make it out to be.
On the other devices, I'm hoping we see a few more big name competitors to compete with the Deck. As good as the Aya Neo seems to be, I'd not heard of the company until I saw the handheld, so I was never comfortable shelling out that much money for one. GDP can't afford to sell at a loss either, so the hardware/performance available wasn't super compelling to me. If Microsoft were to launch one, however...
Bit of a weird attitude to take about gaming on a gaming forum. What's wrong with a bit of recreational gaming?
I'm not sure it's bringing no-one (the reaction in handheld-centric Japan seems to be very positive), but it is mostly for PC folks, sure. PC is the second biggest market behind mobile though, so there's definitely place for more innovation inside the space.
Its not about quality, it's how many sell. It could be the most perfect handheld of all time, but not sell well so there's no reason to continue to support it. And also, the deck isn't exempt from another stupid reason to drop it like the others. All I'm saying is don't be surprised if they forget about it by mid 2023 because gaben wants to build a rocket to mars or something instead now so buy at your own risk
Last edited by Video Games; 2021-10-03 at 08:53 PM.