I live in Japan and my steam deck is just too big to take outside and whip out on the train or elsewhere. I would definitely buy a switch lite sized device to bring with me outside. Those are the kind of devices I am looking forward to seeing.
Real question is if the software/firmware is open source. They have no incentive to maintain a orphan kernel long term. Any hardware without mainline supported kernel modules, and with a 3rd party reputable maintainer for each should be a no-go.
What makes this better than a steam deck? The processor?
Looking at the specs:
Positives:
Negatives:
Neutral / unknown:
Going by the Verge review of the Windows version of the hardware, it seems the SOC of this isn’t that powerful (and may even be outperformed by the Deck when rendering at 720p on both systems with some games): https://www.theverge.com/reviews/617613/lenovo-legion-go-s-review-feels-good-plays-bad
They did see framerates improve with Bazzite, so presumably the Steam OS release will have similar improvements.
Right? I’m wondering why I wouldnt just wait for the next iteration of the Steam Deck.
I live in Japan and my steam deck is just too big to take outside and whip out on the train or elsewhere. I would definitely buy a switch lite sized device to bring with me outside. Those are the kind of devices I am looking forward to seeing.
Real question is if the software/firmware is open source. They have no incentive to maintain a orphan kernel long term. Any hardware without mainline supported kernel modules, and with a 3rd party reputable maintainer for each should be a no-go.
Better ergonomics