• Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    5 days ago

    I soooo wish I had a use case for one. They’re completely amazing devices and in my more mobile days, it would have been the perfect device for me. But now I’m home all the time and my partner and I have desktops set up next to each other, so I don’t have a use for one.

    • Fubarberry@sopuli.xyzOPM
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      5 days ago

      The biggest thing for me is being able to put games to sleep and pick them up later. Being able to instantly stop playing a game, and then instantly start playing back at that same spot later has really freed me up to play in a lot of small sessions.

      I’ve majorly cut down on how much time I spend on my phone, and replaced it with bite sized chunks of playing real games.

      • Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        5 days ago

        That is an awesome feature! I don’t find myself playing short sessions nowadays. That would be super useful if I did though!

        • Telorand@reddthat.com
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          5 days ago

          It helps me play games that I would otherwise avoid on my desktop (usually low-requirement games like Vampire Survivor-likes or action platformers). If I gotta pick up a controller to play it, the Deck is probably better. I can also play in shorter bursts, so if I have ten minutes of nothing to do, that’s ten minutes I can make progress on a game.

          And because of that I’ve finished a lot more games than I did with only my desktop.

    • NotSteve_@lemmy.ca
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      3 days ago

      I have this problem… I ended up getting one anyway and do kind of regret it. It’s a great machine and I’ve enjoyed having it for the occasional flight or train ride, but when I’m at home I’d rather just be hooked up to my desktop or TV. If I was still commuting an hour to the office everyday I’d probably get a lot more use out of it

    • callouscomic@lemm.ee
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      5 days ago

      I’m home constantly. I have a nice gaming PC with a comfy chair AND a nice big screen TV.

      I got the original asap and then upgraded to OLED asap. Both were absolutely worth it. I almost play on it more than anything. I even stream the more graphic heavy games from desktop to Steam Deck, and stream PS5 or PS Plus Streaming games to my Steam Deck.

      Handheld gaming is just nicer for me. More comfortable. More personal. I can see everything better. Everything looks more crisp on it.

      I have no real use case for one and am basically never mobile yet I use it like crazy.

      • xycu@programming.dev
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        5 days ago

        I had a fairly opposite experience. I bought a Steam Deck when it first came out and had to return it during the refund period because of a software bug making it basically unusable with my account.

        A year later, the bug was finally fixed and I rebought. And… I like the fact that it runs Linux and the efforts done to make windows games playable in Linux in general. But I’ve found that i actually don’t enjoy the form factor of the Steam Deck at all.

        I find it to be too big and heavy to hold comfortably without resting it on something. The buttons are tiny and too close to the edge. The d-pad sucks, at least on mine. Staring at the little screen gives me a headache and text/icons are too small in a lot of games. The Wi-Fi is really slow (at least in the original LCD model) and downloading/installing takes absolutely forever. I’ve literally spent more time installing games and downloading updates than actually playing games in it.

        It has been months since I last turned mine on. In hindsight, it was a poor purchase for me.

        I do still like it as a concept and an happy to see it is successful. I welcome the new Linux users. I follow the steam deck communities and read the news.

        … But it’s just not for me, apparently.

        • callouscomic@lemm.ee
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          3 days ago

          I will note from experience the weight decrease with the OLED version was noticeable. So that was an improvement. I also have the official dock hardwired with ethernet so I tend to plug in for downloads. A lot of things have been fixed and improved since launch as well.

          But you are right, it can be heavy, clunky, slow, and depending on what you wanna do, it may requiring a lot of tinkering. There’s also the occasional games that just won’t work at all or great on it, even with some tinkering.

      • Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        5 days ago

        Hahaha that’s fair! I have a hugely comfy setup at home and even before I emulated all my switch games, I only ever used my switch docked. The deck is a brilliant piece of technology, but it just wouldn’t see any use in my household.

    • stevedice@sh.itjust.works
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      4 days ago

      I used to think I didn’t have a use case for one either but you know how sitting at your desk takes slightly more than zero effort? Well, that tiny amount of effort made it so whenever I actually sat my ass down, I would end up only playing “heavy” games like Skyrim while ignoring stuff like Bastion, Cuphead, Hollow Night, the LEGO Games, Pacman World, etc. Like, I’m not gonna drag my ass to my office to play Thimbleweed Park. Having a handheld got rid of that mental block and I’ve finally finished several games I otherwise wouldn’t have, like pretty much anything that needs to be emulated. I even started buying games specifically because I wanted to play them on it.

      • Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        4 days ago

        I understand, but I can use my desktop from the place I relax, in addition to my desk chair! I can play stuff from relaxation station with zero effort. I’ve only ever used my switch docked (and now I just emulate it for better performance.)

        I’ve never personally had an issue booting up my dope rig to play Stardew Valley or Vampire Survivors!

    • ByteOnBikes@slrpnk.net
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      4 days ago

      You’re not the only one. I bought a Steam deck because why not. I didn’t have a use case.

      But every month for a year, I continued to play more and more on Steam deck over PC.

      It’s reaching a point where if i had to choose between upgrading my graphic card or buying the next iteration of a Steam Deck, I’m going for that next Steam Deck.

      • Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        4 days ago

        That makes sense! If I ever used my switch undocked, I would maybe consider it. But 100% of the time I played it docked. My place of comfort is the room with my computer and some screens and the comfiest furniture. I don’t hang out anywhere else in my house and I’m a homebody, so I’m not gonna bring it anywhere.

        If I’m gonna dock a Steamdeck, I might as well just use my dope computer!

    • penquin@lemm.ee
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      5 days ago

      I have a nice desktop, but I still play the deck. Sitting in a chair for a while gets painful at times, especially when you work from home ON a computer. Lol.

      • Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        5 days ago

        That’s fair! With our setup I can sit in a chair, or lay back in bed and still play games! If we didn’t have that option, I’d probably have a use-case for a deck hahaha

        It’s tough for me to go back to 100FPS or less after a long time playing at 165hz!

        • penquin@lemm.ee
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          5 days ago

          Man, you know what I’ve been dying to do? Build a steam machine and connect it to my TV in my bedroom. That would be epic. Find a smaller PC or collect some used parts from Facebook market place and slap BazziteOS on it and go to town.

          • Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            5 days ago

            Hell yeah! That sounds dope! I have computers connected to all of my screen in our house, but they’re moooostly running Windows 10. Just a couple pis running Linux… the GUI on a Pi5 is laggy but it runs 1080p YouTube perfectly so that’s fine. I should start converting my machines to Linux… my main game machines I think I’ll keep on Windows 10 until Linux is closer to 100% compatibility. It’s getting there!

            • penquin@lemm.ee
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              4 days ago

              Honestly, good job. Fucking tvs nowadays are absolute garbage anyway. So are those stupid little fire sticks and their likes. If you think Linux doesn’t fully work for you (understandable), Check out Titus’s debloat tool. Make yourself a micro windows 11 ISO and use it instead of the official build. I got one running in a dualboot setup, and it’s extremely light. You may be missing some drivers, but they’re easily installable. I’ve been thinking of this, too, myself. Tvs have some of the most spying software ever.

              • Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                4 days ago

                Thank you! I think I’m gonna ride Win10 until it’s Jo longer supported, then go Win10 LTSC IoT until I’m comfortable switching all of my machines to Pop!. I play a VERY SPECIFIC 20+ year old Half Life mod with some folks that my Software Engineer friend has been unable to get working on Linux in any manner… so unfortunately I am tied to Windows. I could dual-boot but I don’t want any boot loader headaches, and our main machines exist pretty much solely to play games hahaha. I do debloat with OOSU10, I’ll scope Titus’s tool!

                You’re SO not wrong about TVs being a complete privacy nightmare. No chance I’m letting em have ny WiFi info!

                • penquin@lemm.ee
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                  4 days ago

                  No worries. I understand. If you ever decide to dualboot, I’d highly suggest you separate the two OSs into their own SSDs, that way you won’t get any bootloader headaches at all. Whenever windows updates and takes over the bootloader, you get into your bios and change the boot sequence to boot into the Linux drive. From there you re-enable OS prober in grub, update grub, and boom you’re in. This is how I’ve been doing it to avoid all the bootloader headaches.

    • T (they/she)@beehaw.org
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      4 days ago

      Here we have desktops set up next to each other but since we work remotely we don’t want to spent our time on the office all day, so we play things on the couch/living room and the steam decks are used almost all the time. You can basically run the game on your desktop and play it remotely on the SD, on hand-held mode or docked plugged on the TV.

      It is also the perfect companion for travel. We had a 5 hours flight in November which passed very quickly playing Balatro, lol.

    • stardust@lemmy.ca
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      5 days ago

      I find it fantastic for games with lot of side quests like jrpgs so I can utilize the suspend feature to make better progress with the portability and being able to stop whenever I want without losing progress. And then when it comes to the more cinematic main missions I might go and play on my PC with the TV display.