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Valve’s Steam Deck trailer is a 60 second pitch for the handheld deviceAnd it’s a pretty good pitch
And it’s a pretty good pitch

After a month of information dribbling out of IGN, Valve have uploaded a trailer of their own for theSteam Deck. They describe their new hardware as “the most powerful gaming handheld in the world,” and “powerful, portable PC gaming.” It’s a strong pitch video, honestly, as I continue to debate whether I want to buy one.Introducing Steam DeckWatch on YouTubeAs an aside, commiserations to the commenters under the video, the majority of whom seemed to have subscribed to Valve’s YouTube channel several years ago to keep up withTeam Fortress 2updates. Keep the faith, true believers.People who have got their hands on the Steam Deckseem impressed so far, noting its size and weight but saying it felt comfortable and easy to use. We haven’t been able to try it ourselves due to Covid flight restrictions, but Katharine has been picking the brains of its designers. They pitched it to us asa reasonable option for people looking to upgrade their PCand explainedwhy they weren’t interested in making a handheld device that could only play indie games.Indie games remain what I’m most interested in playing on it. It’s a great sales pitch that it can play anything in my Steam library, but I can’t imagine playing Control on a tiny screen or on a device that when taxed has a two hour battery life. Icanimagine playing Hades on it without having to re-buy the game on Switch, where the battery life will more likely lean towards the 8 hour mark.
After a month of information dribbling out of IGN, Valve have uploaded a trailer of their own for theSteam Deck. They describe their new hardware as “the most powerful gaming handheld in the world,” and “powerful, portable PC gaming.” It’s a strong pitch video, honestly, as I continue to debate whether I want to buy one.Introducing Steam DeckWatch on YouTubeAs an aside, commiserations to the commenters under the video, the majority of whom seemed to have subscribed to Valve’s YouTube channel several years ago to keep up withTeam Fortress 2updates. Keep the faith, true believers.People who have got their hands on the Steam Deckseem impressed so far, noting its size and weight but saying it felt comfortable and easy to use. We haven’t been able to try it ourselves due to Covid flight restrictions, but Katharine has been picking the brains of its designers. They pitched it to us asa reasonable option for people looking to upgrade their PCand explainedwhy they weren’t interested in making a handheld device that could only play indie games.Indie games remain what I’m most interested in playing on it. It’s a great sales pitch that it can play anything in my Steam library, but I can’t imagine playing Control on a tiny screen or on a device that when taxed has a two hour battery life. Icanimagine playing Hades on it without having to re-buy the game on Switch, where the battery life will more likely lean towards the 8 hour mark.
After a month of information dribbling out of IGN, Valve have uploaded a trailer of their own for theSteam Deck. They describe their new hardware as “the most powerful gaming handheld in the world,” and “powerful, portable PC gaming.” It’s a strong pitch video, honestly, as I continue to debate whether I want to buy one.
Introducing Steam DeckWatch on YouTube
Introducing Steam Deck

As an aside, commiserations to the commenters under the video, the majority of whom seemed to have subscribed to Valve’s YouTube channel several years ago to keep up withTeam Fortress 2updates. Keep the faith, true believers.
People who have got their hands on the Steam Deckseem impressed so far, noting its size and weight but saying it felt comfortable and easy to use. We haven’t been able to try it ourselves due to Covid flight restrictions, but Katharine has been picking the brains of its designers. They pitched it to us asa reasonable option for people looking to upgrade their PCand explainedwhy they weren’t interested in making a handheld device that could only play indie games.
Indie games remain what I’m most interested in playing on it. It’s a great sales pitch that it can play anything in my Steam library, but I can’t imagine playing Control on a tiny screen or on a device that when taxed has a two hour battery life. Icanimagine playing Hades on it without having to re-buy the game on Switch, where the battery life will more likely lean towards the 8 hour mark.