this post was submitted on 18 Aug 2025
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Steam Deck

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A place to discuss and support all things Steam Deck.

Replacement for r/steamdeck_linux.

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Optionally, what would you have wanted to know before you bought one?

Thanks!

Edit: Hey, thank you all very very much for your comments and suggestions, I really appreciate. I will most likely save up more and get the 1TB OLED model rather than the LCD model I was initially planning on. A couple of reasons for that, one, I am not good with electronics and I'd probably screw something up putting a new storage drive in. And two this thing will most likely be a permanent replacement for my old gaming laptop, which at this point is more than 10 years old, and seems to be on its last legs (I installed Linux on it, which was a struggle, but that is probably on me rather than Linux or the computer being at fault).

Anyway, I appreciate everyone's responses and thanks for helping a gal out!

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As others have said, spring for the OLED at the lowest storage tier, refurbished if you want to save a few extra dollars and have patience.

The ssd upgrade is easy to do and on the wallet. Another minor upgrade I'd suggest are PlayVital back button covers...makes those a lot easier to use.

[–] yaroto98@lemmy.world 17 points 2 days ago

Go OLED if you can, grab a 1tb sdcard for storage expansion. Watch a few people tweak the settings of a game and the graphics card. You can force lower settings and make a game have higher fps and much longer battery life and not really see a loss in graphics due to the smaller screen. Also watch a few tutorials on tweaking steam controller settings. So you can pick up some rando game that's built for kb/m and make it work nice with a controller. Especially gyro, FPS games are more fun being able to gyro the crosshairs a little for micro movements like targeting the head.

Also once you get it, play Aperature Desk Job. It's free, and is a nice 30min tutorial of your deck.

[–] Sirdubdee@lemmy.world 6 points 1 day ago (1 children)

You might want to upgrade your couch & TV. If you’re used to playing at a desktop, it doesn’t feel right to play a handheld in your gaming chair. You can plop down in a big comfortable couch, put on a TV show or movie in the background, and grind through whatever game you like that runs decent.

It’s good for when someone else wants to watch a tv show you don’t care about, so you pop out your deck and spend time together doing separate things that interest you.

Remember your admin password if you mess around on the Linux side.

[–] Pilferjinx@lemmy.world 2 points 1 day ago

Yeah I love hanging out with the family while I casually play something.

[–] ryokimball@infosec.pub 14 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (1 children)

If you're comfortable changing an m.2 SSD in a standard laptop, then working on the steam deck isn't much different. My advice is buying the lowest storage SD and then buying an aftermarket 2TB.

But also be aware that gameplay on SD cards is also very performative, so you may not need that extra storage anyway.

[–] hedgehog@ttrpg.network 10 points 2 days ago

Just be aware that you need a 2230 M.2, not the much more common 2280 size.

[–] QubaXR@lemmy.world 12 points 2 days ago (2 children)

Many oled models have serious audio issues. Speakers and bt audio work fine, but the 3.5 mm jack is noisy. If this happens, you open a ticket right away, send it back and they will replace sound board for you. I got mine done. It's better, but not perfect.

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[–] BrazenSigilos@ttrpg.network 11 points 2 days ago (10 children)

Buy a nice case for transporting it. I like my JSAUX case, it has alot more storage space then the stock case.

[–] pentastarm@piefed.ca 7 points 2 days ago (2 children)

Okay, thank you! If I can ask a dumb question, what else do you take with you when you bring your steamdeck places?

[–] breakcore@discuss.tchncs.de 7 points 2 days ago (2 children)

I bring the power brick, a USB-C dongle, HDMI cable and one or two controllers.

That way I can plug it at my friends or in a hotel etc.

I have a portable USB-C display that I bring sometimes, if for example travelling by train for a longer period.

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[–] BrazenSigilos@ttrpg.network 5 points 1 day ago

Power brick, USB-C cable, external battery, earbud headphones.

Sometimes I also add a folding bluetooth keyboard, mini bluetooth mouse, and USB drives, but that's only when I'm gonna use the Deck as a computer for 3D modeling or typing tasks.

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[–] Whitebrow@lemmy.world 10 points 2 days ago

Getting your games from Epic and GoG to work on it takes a bit of work but overall not complicated.

Also if you use an external controller, sometimes it will show the wrong platform glyphs. Personally I just deal with it while using a PS controller but you can just have it show generic ones if you prefer that.

[–] Prove_your_argument@piefed.social 8 points 2 days ago (11 children)

Don't set charge limits, because odds are you can never get back to 100% battery charging ever again due to bugs (at best I get 99% now.)

Don't expect your games to "just work" - even if they have a green check box, expect to have to troubleshoot like you always have, almost certainly even more.

Memorize Steam button + X to open the keyboard, you're gonna need it.

Don't go anywhere without a charger unless you're playing a game that you know will last long on battery.

The more games you install, the more games you won't play. A giant SD card and a giant SSD just means you have more shit that you look at and feel guilty before you power it off because you can't decide what to play anyway (and that's a big factor for why our backlogs have been growing all this time even before getting a deck. Too many games, not enough time and motivation.)

Know that a USB-C dock is gonna have issues. You're gonna have to fuck with audio output settings each and every time you connect it, and sometimes when you resume it from sleep. It will not always gracefully recover when you unplug it either.

There's gonna be a refresh to the hardware before you know it, and you're gonna want that version.

It's too big to fit in your pocket, you basically need a backpack for it.

You won't need any kind of case, but a glass screen protector is a good idea.

The bottom plastic near the screws will crack from stress. It happens even moreso on the transparent model.

Expect very poor control schemes on any game that is not incredibly popular with official gamepad support. If you are patient and can setup the keybinds yourself you can do OK- but some games just don't work well with a controller, period.

Sleep mode drains battery like a motherfucker. It seemed great on release, but now I lose what feels like 20% a day, or more. This means the deck you set down Sunday night will almost certainly be dead by Saturday when you get back to it.

Games that have poor save schemes like what has been found in older RPGs can be frustrating to deal with, because if you pause your session and come back to it... you still need to grind to the next save point or lose your progress. This is in a non-issue in tons of games, but can be an issue sometimes.

Some games sync in-game settings to the cloud, and overwrite what you have on your deck or PC depending on what was last used.

If you use an SD card, sometimes it can take minutes to hours to provision the storage necessary to begin downloading and installing the game on said SD card. This is after it's properly formatted, no matter how many games have been installed and how much space is free. It's a great mystery.

There's hotkey combinations to turn up and down brightness. If you hold down the steam key long enough, it shows you many more of those combinations to do many more useful things.

When you're changing settings in a game, you can specify changing global settings or hit a slider to make it per-game profile. It's almost always better to change per-game profiles so your settings can be custom per game.

You can remote play on a ps5 incredibly well. Chiaki4deck is great.

Your GOG, Epic and other games do not work easily natively. There are fan projects like Heroic Games Launcher to have this functionality, but they aren't native to the system.

It's very easy to not have any of your steam playtime register with steam.

It's very easy for your steam playtime to suddenly display dozens or hundreds of hours from sleep mode being utilized in some games.

That's just what I can mention from personal experience.

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[–] alekwithak@lemmy.world 8 points 2 days ago

The LCD model is not compatible with wifi 6 :(

[–] Brosplosion@lemmy.zip 0 points 1 day ago (3 children)

Controversial opinion, but if cost isn't an issue then a steam deck isn't a great buy. It fills a niche for sure but honestly a gaming laptop with a gamepad is 100% more useful IMHO.

I struggled to find it anymore portable than a laptop is and worse performance/screen/utility in almost every measurable way.

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