![]() “Steam Deck is also an open PC, adding the ability to install any software or connect with any hardware,” Valve said in a note to journalists, while its website boasts that “You can connect to peripherals, throw the picture onto a big screen, and do all the other PC things you’d expect.” The Steam Deck’s screen should also be a bit clearer than its Nintendo rival, with a 1280×800 resolution and an “Optically bonded LCD for enhanced readability.” By comparison, the Switch drops down to 30Hz when undocked, a refresh rate that simply wouldn’t fly for us PC snobs. ![]() It’s not OLED, alas, but Valve says the display shines at a very respectable 400 nits (crucial for outdoor use) and runs at 60Hz, a.k.a. You’ll find a big 7-inch display front and center-the same size as the new OLED Switch-complete with touchscreen functionality. The Steam Deck looks like the Nintendo Switch, if the Nintendo Switch was created by diehard PC enthusiasts. ![]() Preorders open July 16, with shipments starting in December. Valve officially pulled the curtain back on the Steam Deck on Thursday-a $399 gaming handheld designed to bring your Steam gaming library to the palms of your hands, powered by AMD hardware and Valve’s own Linux-based SteamOS operating system.
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