When I first pre-ordered I was working a job that had hour lunches and thought it would be great to kill all that extra time. Now I'm in a different job with 30 minute lunch, so I don't get to use it as often but I would still say it's worth it just to keep in my car if I ever happen to have time to kill before an appointment.
Steam Deck
A place to discuss and support all things Steam Deck.
Replacement for r/steamdeck_linux.
As Lemmy doesn't have flairs yet, you can use these prefixes to indicate what type of post you have made, eg:
[Flair] My post title
The following is a list of suggested flairs:
[Discussion] - General discussion.
[Help] - A request for help or support.
[News] - News about the deck.
[PSA] - Sharing important information.
[Game] - News / info about a game on the deck.
[Update] - An update to a previous post.
[Meta] - Discussion about this community.
Some more Steam Deck specific flairs:
[Boot Screen] - Custom boot screens/videos.
[Selling] - If you are selling your deck.
These are not enforced, but they are encouraged.
Rules:
- Follow the rules of Sopuli
- Posts must be related to the Steam Deck in an obvious way.
- No piracy, there are other communities for that.
- Discussion of emulators are allowed, but no discussion on how to illegally acquire ROMs.
- This is a place of civil discussion, no trolling.
- Have fun.
I use it almost everyday. I'm getting through my steam library more so than I was on my PC. It makes me want to play more games. I also use it to play emulators which with a bigger screen and power it's better than my switch. I dock it to my TV and take it on the go and recently on the plane.
I think realistically the most important thing is how big your steam library is. In general, I've hated handhelds. The DS was great but the screen was too small and I've never been motivated to use it to try new experiences but I've never had that issue with the steam deck. I think it's due to (a) the library size (b) the first attempt at an all digital console (c) the ease of emulating my physical retro library to quickly jump on my impulses to play them.
I really had every reason to hate this since it was an impulse FOMO purchase which I could afford but probably should not have.
I play with my deck every day, probably more than my actual PC these days.
I use it a lot, it is ny main gaming machine, i couldn't be happier with my purchase
I played it a lot when I got it - it was a good excuse to play some games that have been languishing in my library. Recently I haven't used it a ton except when on travel, but my fiance has played a lot of games on it, and it opens up the possibility of us playing PC games together. So I'd say it's been well worth it overall.
Is there actually a way to see how many hours you've used it for?
Having no idea how much I've used it total, I'd still say it's a good purchase.
When I get the itch to play a game I'll play the Deck an hour or 2 I've the course of a few days until I beat the game or I'm distracted. If I'm not doing that the deck can sit dormant for months at a time. I'm not a huge gamer but I am a tech enthusiast. I think it's worth it but I can't get into a lot of games. I have trouble finding games that get me hooked. I'd like to play Jedi Survivor at some point but not at the current price.
I don't have one, so I can't speak for myself.
But my coworker, who works later into the night (before I take over the night shift) seems to falll asleep playing it most days.
While I disagree with this on a professional level, I'm not about to stir the pot if his work is getting done.
My night shift coworkers bring in PS5s and Xboxes and set them up every night. I felt guilty bringing in a switch or 3DS on holidays I knew would be dead when I worked on nights. A handheld seems somewhat acceptable to me as it can just be turned off and thrown in a bag when it gets busy.
Now that I'm on days I read semi related technical books of things I'm interested in or hack around on a pi or Arduino that may or may not lead to something useful for work. That way I can say I'm learning my job better even if it's stuff I'd do in my free time. Boss seems to like that.
I don't play mine everyday (owning an Xbox and Switch means I move about a bit) but for what I payed for the base model it's totally worth it. I rarely sit at my PC to game since working from home so being able to lay back on the sofa with some Stellaris, Civ 6 or Cities is a touch. Plus the freedom it allows for customisation and emulation put all other consoles to shame.
I bought a decent dock for it so it kinda spends more time plugged into TV than not but yeah had one for about 6 months still use it.
I had an initial period where I played it a bunch, then I decided I have a few more Switch games to get through and then that will become a dust collector mostly, until I want to replay something many years from now. After this year or so I imagine it will be seeing tons of usage.
I suppose I could say I bought it a bit prematurely, but given that I have been using it and so has my son its been a fine purchase
I use it more than I have any previous hand-helds
That is to say, occasionally haha but still love it
I use mine just about every day. I still have a great time with it and use it as my main gaming machine. No regrets here.
Everyday. Playing wow right now.
I use it as a steam link when I'm home and load it up with emulators in case I'm away from my gaming PC.
the proton support this great, I just love having less fan noise and pleanty of battery.
Probably the best gaming hardware purchase I've ever made. Play weekly, take it with us on vacation so we can hook it to hotel tvs and not put up with cable or smart tv BS. Absolutely love it.
I play for maybe an hour or 2 every couple of days. I recently docked it to the living room TV and now the wife plays a couple of hours a week now too.
Sometimes every day, sometimes not for a week or so. I usually play with it docked to my tv, I have a wireless mouse and 2 wireless controllers. I get interested in certain games I think would be fun playing on the TV, like coop games and right now Just Cause 3. I also got back into emulators, they are fun on the deck and TV.
Recently I realized I had 350 dollars worth of CSGO creates sitting in my inventory. So I bought a steam deck. I'm a game developer so I have a desktop with a 1080 and 64 GB of ram, a desktop with a 4070 and 64 GB of ram. A laptop with a 1660 and 16 GB of ram, and now a Steam deck with 64 GB of storage and a 1 tb micro sd. I use my Steam deck rarely at most. I have so many devices I don't really need a Steam deck but I had enough to get the Steam deck and honestly, I probably would have bought 350 dollars worth of games but I thought the investment in hardware would help me test games for Steam deck compatibility. Besides it's something to add to my collection.
Overall, I don't use it though. I don't even really use my laptop. If I am going to play games I usually do so on one of my desktops. Also, I will say I think I made the mistake of not dishing out 200 more dollars for the 512 GB version that comes with an anti-glare screen. The load times for micro SDs are really long and I am surprised they only support UHS-I instead of something faster. The anti-glare screen also helps it be a more viable device as I'm likely to use it in the car on road trips or someplace like the living room where we keep the curtains open.
I also didn't realize it got so hot. I wouldn't really want to give the device to my kids to play. My oldest is 5 and he loves the Nintendo Switch but we don't have a ton of games for it. I'd love to give him my steam deck to mess around with but the deck seems fragile and gets extremely hot compared to the switch or even his Samsung A7 tablet. I wouldn't want him to feel the back of the Deck, get burnt, and drop it or get scared of it. It's really not a young-kid-friendly device like I thought it might be.
Closing thoughts, I got the hardware essentially for free and I like it. It's a great little device and I certainly love messing around with Steam OS in desktop mode. It's a cool little experiment. I feel like if I was a consumer I'd likely would have been a bit disappointed with the 64 GB version. It might be worth it to pop it open and install a better drive in it someday but I'll stick with the slow SD card for now. Most of the time I use I'm just trying to waste time anyways.
Very happy with it. $400 MSRP feels right, I don't think I would feel so positively if it was more. I'm on vacation right now and using it a lot to wind down in the evenings.
It's my only PC, so I've used it quite a bit, although not as much as I thought I would?
I got it day one and played it a fair bit last year (about as much as my PS5), but recently I've been playing on PS5 (and Series X, to a lesser extent) a lot more. It hasn't been collecting dust too much, as I'm still using it as a regular old PC, but certainly not daily.
Once a month, on average, I’d guess. I just thought it’d be a nice way to game in the living room. It is, and I’d buy it again. Prior to opening it I would go months between times that I play. I wish I had more time to customize it, really, as the control scheme offers so many possibilities. But I can game or I can bind, and not both.
Missus doesn't let me near it. Overall, it was a good purchase but next time I'd go for one with smaller breasts... and no gaming addiction 🤭
I mean I knew about the breast at the time of purchase, but gaming addiction...