• FubarberryOPM
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    667 months ago

    I remember one of my first thoughts on the Deck was “even if this fails commercially or can’t play any new games, I want it for old games and emulation. Even if it goes nowhere else, it would be worth it for me.”

    • @[email protected]
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      247 months ago

      And it’s why I hate capitalism as a consumer.

      “People need an incentive to invent things!”

      Well, if that incentive is making money instead of making a great thing, it’s probably not going to be a great thing. Great things make money.

      • @[email protected]
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        167 months ago

        Oh hey, that’s why I hate capitalism as an engineer. The endless pursuit of profit first rather than making good things that people want is disheartening as someone who just wants to make things that make life better

        • @[email protected]
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          87 months ago

          Listen. We need you to shave another $0.13 off the cost of the unit. Just like, reduce the quality a bit. No end user will ever notice.

    • @[email protected]
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      117 months ago

      Exactly, if you want a good product, have the developers make what “they” want. Usually works out.

  • Lettuce eat lettuce
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    337 months ago

    I love this so much. It reminds me of how AMD Threadripper came to be.

    Apparently Threadripper was a skunkworks project by some of the engineers at AMD that they worked on in their spare time. They wanted to see if they could basically slap together a bunch of normal CPU dyes into on mega chip with a high speed/bandwidth interposer connecting them together.

    It was almost abandoned and they had to fight to get it taken seriously. But it proved to be a viable product, and singlehandedly was responsible for decimating what was left of Intel’s place in the HEDT market so badly, that after several years of failed attempts to keep up, Intel officially announced that they wouldn’t be competing in that space anymore.

    It’s such a cool thing when talented and passionate people come together without having to be subject to strict marketability and just try to create something awesome and revolutionary.

    The Steam Deck kicked off an entire new market for handheld gaming devices that had real power to play modern PC games. And despite a bunch of competing and copycat products, the Steam Deck is still king.

    I love mine, have close to 200 hours on it, which for me is a ton. I’ve barely gamed on my main PC in the last year, it’s just so much more comfortable to play on the couch or in my bed.

  • MentalEdge
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    7 months ago

    It’s also what got me to finally go linux full-time.

    I had tried to a couple times before, but always ran into one too many snags.

    When the deck was announced I thought to myself “that can’t work with every game, can it?” as I’d attempted that myself.

    But I had to see for myself, and the improvements in proton were staggering. And it’s gotten even better since! Who would have though Apex Legends, Hunt Showdown, and a bunch of other holdouts and anti-cheat games would be running on linux within a year of the deck releasing?

  • Semperverus
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    117 months ago

    I’ll be real, before the Steam Deck existed, I was toying around with the idea of either building something basically like it, or how to slap a Steam Link into that kind of formfactor (3d printer, breadboard shenanigans, etc.)

    Was very pleasantly surprised when Valve announced exactly what I wanted. Have been happy with it ever since.