Tallahassee
Member
"Valve just quietly redefined what PC gaming can be"
"4K 60fps with FSR"
rdna 3
8gb vram
16gb ram
"4K 60fps with FSR"
rdna 3
8gb vram
16gb ram
Again, the context was price and you just said "spend a couple more hundred dollars", lmao.Ok.....docked Steam Deck in the living room isn't a great experience at any price really though. If you are going to spend that much, might as well spend a couple hundred more for Steam Machine. There really isn't much in the mini PC market that is comparable to this so the pricing is difficult to nail down.
"Valve just quietly redefined what PC gaming can be"
"4K 60fps with FSR"
rdna 3
8gb vram
16gb ram
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I think people are overestimating this
It's really great how Valve is working now, and I'll buy for sure. But let's not get crazy how things are turning, because it's not that different from what some people are doing for years, with Valve itself making this possible when they created the Steam OS. Remember, it's a fucking PC. Form factor and how they are updating their Linux are really great, but again, it's a mini PC
Chill the fuck out, guys
Again, the context was price and you just said "spend a couple more hundred dollars", lmao.
He is specifically talking about playing games with a KB&M in this scenario.
And what do you even mean by "great experience" it works perfectly fine.
It is half baked, but still functions as intended. It's very barebones, with alot of updates promised, so you know maybe it might improve in the next 400+ days until release of the Hybrid PC. Maybe not you may be right. But we won't know for a year so shit talking about something we know fuck all about seems pointless.Struck a nerve with you huh Jez? Every single reviewer outside of Windows Central basically called FSE half baked. Either you have been living under a rock or under Nadellas balls. Windows is a turd, PC gaming is great despite it, not because of it.
They probably are overestimating it, but the response is because this is the form-factor product people have wanted to exist. The Steam Deck largely because of SteamOS as software is the most like a console I've seen a PC feel, but it has the limitations of being a battery-powered device.
Even if you use Steam Big Picture mode on Windows, you still can't change basic PC settings without going back to the desktop, you don't have a suspend state that saves where you are in the game, etc. That is fixed with this device, and it does kind of indicate a next step.
Even if you don't care about VR (I don't), that headset running ARM just means it's a manner of time before people's existing Steam libraries work on Android, so you do have this neat mix of form-factors to play your existing games.
So that would exceed his budget..again, context.I said "ok" and then added my own point. So what?
What games are you playing and what TV are using with that docked Steam Deck?
It is half baked, but still functions as intended. It's very barebones, with alot of updates promised, so you know maybe it might improve in the next 400+ days until release of the Hybrid PC. Maybe not youay be right. Bit we won't know for a year so shit talking about something we know fuck all about seems pointless.
As someone who has tried to dock the Steam Deck to a 4K TV. It is ass. I can get by on a 24" 1080p monitor though. This is why I am interested in the Steam Machine. It does not have to give me PS5 Pro quality but it can't be that bad.Steam Machine will be by far a better PC gaming experience in the living room than a Steam Deck and a dock.
It's hilarious to me how against this device some of you people are.
What's more funny is people thinking they know better then Valve engineers.
I don't think anyone is against this existing. The hyperbole of it "redefining" PC gaming is pretty nonsensical and silly though.It's hilarious to me how against this device some of you people are.
What's more funny is people thinking they know better then Valve engineers.
Anything released to the OS itself. Steam OS makes that all accessible to the controller interface. Windows makes you use a mouse.What basic PC settings would you need to change that aren't already available in the settings of just about 99% of PC games. Vsync? Resolution? Frame Limit?
You can just use Joytokey. You can do everything in Windows with a controller except turn it on.Anything released to the OS itself. Steam OS makes that all accessible to the controller interface. Windows makes you use a mouse.
Steam OS isn't perfect and there are rough edges. But it feels much more like a console versus a generic PC.
So that would exceed his budget..again, context.
As someone who has tried to dock the Steam Deck to a 4K TV. It is ass. I can get by on a 24" 1080p monitor though. This is why I am interested in the Steam Machine. It does not have to give me PS5 Pro quality but it can't be that bad.
Or easily login. Still having to use a controller with a mouse is a major pain in the ass. Try Steam OS. It's just like a console to manage things in the stock environment. You can choose diplay resolution, pair controllers, manage storage, etc. All from a controller driven menu. This is very different from a keyboard and mouse driven interface. Is it impossible to navigate with a controller? No, with extra tools. But in Steam OS it's not terrible to do, and it's designed from the ground up to not need the extra tools.You can just use Joytokey. You can do everything in Windows with a controller except turn it on.
It was unnecessary information.I'll try to be clearer. My point was separate, in general, not specific to anyone. Moving on...
I've done the same and didn't care for it. Handhelds were not made for higher rez output. Some games can get by I guess. Steam Machine will get you as close as you are going to get to a PS5 with a mini PC from what I can tell. The benchmarks should be interesting.
It was unnecessary information.
You decided to chime in on a conversation with very specific details, price point, kb&m mouse RTS games that run on a potato and hooked to a small monitor...with arguments that simply do not apply.
Outside of those parameters I would NEVER suggest using a docked Deck.
Or easily login. Still having to use a controller with a mouse is a major pain in the ass. Try Steam OS. It's just like a console to manage things in the stock environment. You can choose diplay resolution, pair controllers, manage storage, etc. All from a controller driven menu. This is very different from a keyboard and mouse driven interface. Is it impossible to navigate with a controller? No, with extra tools. But in Steam OS it's not terrible to do, and it's designed from the ground up to not need the extra tools.
You done?
The Steam Deck in particular is a 720p system with scaling games are upscaled from 480/540p. So blowing that up to a large screen looks horrible.I've done the same and didn't care for it. Handhelds were not made for higher rez output. Some games can get by I guess. Steam Machine will get you as close as you are going to get to a PS5 with a mini PC from what I can tell. The benchmarks should be interesting.
So far I spend $370 for a mini PC that does run as fast as the Steam Machine does and put the official Steam OS image on it. I'm enjoying the experience much more than my main gaming system with a 3080ti that's on a different TV.Now the question is how much extra are you willing to pay for that vs just getting a prebuilt with equal or better specs around the same price and using Steam Big Picture Mode like the rest of us.
Yep. They just upgraded their old Steam Machines/made a more powerfull Steam Deck without screen and battery... "Wow redefined PC gaming".Not against it. Just not impressed by it.
I can think of a few examples (these are on the top of my head).What basic PC settings would you need to change that aren't already available in the settings of just about 99% of PC games.
You done?
So far I spend $370 for a mini PC that does run as fast as the Steam Machine does and put the official Steam OS image on it. I'm enjoying the experience much more than my main gaming system with a 3080ti that's on a different TV.
I was OMW..Where the hell you an hour ago when I made the mistake of replying to mr. grumpy pants?
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Are they looking to use it connected to a TV like a console, or in a general desk setup like a regular computer?So lets say this thing ends up over $500. You would advise someone that wants to get into PC gaming and has general use experience with windows to take this device or a similarly priced prebuilt that has more RAM and a better GPU because of those conveniences? Me personally I never would.
It's not from me, it was widely used on Reddit within the first hour. Still, I'll keep that name forever as well. It fits so well.GabeCube...
You just sealed the deal for what I will refer to this as, forever. Thank you.
I agree with you there. In a segment where there are hundreds of options to the point where the single most popular GPU only captures single digit market share, this is not a device that is going to move mountains by any stretch. Goes back to why this PC gamer article is bullshit. Nothing is being redefined here.
Exactly how I feel about our conversation as well. Good. We agree on something. Let's try that "moving on" thing again.
We're hitting autism levels that shouldn't even be possible.
On paper it's already slightly weaker than the base PS5, but the gap is actually much bigger since PS5 games are coded specifically for PS5 hardware whereas the Steam Machine will run standard PC games. Sure some devs will optimize for it but it won't make as big of a difference as coding it specifically for that hardware. FSR4 could've helped close that gap but with only the not so great FSR3 available (for now anyway), it won't really help.Lets see it run anything demanding
$499 should be the max if this thing has any hope of not flopping, but $399 would be the ideal price that would make it a compelling device.Let's see the price for this 8GB PC.