![]() ![]() The Steam Deck will also have a dock, which will be sold separately (price isn’t available yet). However, the latter also comes with: “Premium anti-glare etched glass,” and an “Exclusive virtual keyboard theme.” The $529 USD model includes an “exclusive Steam Community profile bundle,” as does the $649 variant. ![]() It includes alt-mode support for DisplayPort 1.4 “up to 8K or 4K version of the Steam Deck comes with an included carrying case, but the more expensive variants have more for the price. However, the Steam Deck can output via its built-in USB-C port. The Valve Steam Deck looks like a powerful device, but its 1280x800p (16:10) LCD screen is set at 60 Hz. THere will also be an included microSD card slot for even more storage.Īnd what about the screen? Those of you hoping for something higher than 60 fps are sadly out of luck. The Steam Deck also comes with three storage options: 64 GB eMMC (PCIe Gen 2 x1) for $399 USD, 256 GB NVMe SSD (PCIe Gen 3 x4) for $529 USD, and 512 GB high-speed NVMe SSD (PCIe Gen 3 x4) for $649 USD. For RAM, your looking at 16 GB of LPDDR5. The GPU consists of 8 RDNA 2 CUs, ranging from 1.0 to 1.6 GHz. It includes an AMD Zen 2 4c/8t processor, that ranges from 2.4 to 3.5 GHz (likely for overclocking). The tech specs show the Steam Deck is powered by custom AMD architecture. Luckily, they seem optional when paired with the physical buttons. So no, Valve certainly hasn’t dropped the touchpad controls idea that gave the Steam controller little benefit. It sports a 7-inch touchscreen, two mics, two speakers, four face buttons, two thumbsticks, a d-pad, two shoulder buttons, two analog triggers, four back buttons, and two track pads - one on each side. The Valve also revealed some impressive specs for the Steam Deck. Reservations for the device start tomorrow. The company broke down everything about the device in the official website, calling it the “most gaming power you have ever held.” That power, by the way, will set you back starting at $399.99 USD when it goes on sale this December. Just moments ago, Valve revealed the Steam Deck (not to be confused with the Stream Deck), an “all-in-one” portable PC handheld, powered by Steam, along with specs. Well now, it looks like the rumors of a Valve-developed handheld device were true. ![]()
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