Valve has announced that they've sorted out various issues with their Steam Deck supply chain, so they will get through reservations much faster than expected now. This means a lot of people will be bumped up the list a bit getting their Steam Deck purchase email a lot sooner.
Everyone who has an existing reservation will get their purchase email this year. So many who were in "Q4 or later" were bumped up to the Q3 window and Valve said everyone else is now sitting properly inside Q4.
Any new reservations will be in the Q4 list but if those fill up, naturally they spill over into next year. Either way it's good news, as Valve can get Steam Deck units shipping a lot sooner than before.
We don't know exactly what has changed, as Valve only said that "the supply chain shortfalls that affect Steam Deck are gradually clearing up, and we're continuing to ramp production, so we're able to produce more Decks faster than ever before"
Valve also said to expect "more news soon".
This is awesome news, I'm excited to see more of you getting your units. Every single device shipping is a new potential Linux gamer!
Still fiddling around with it, but phenomenal first impressions.
Quoting: mr-victoryThey can't put this to physical stores for obvious reasons (many high profile games unsupported, software has deal breaker bugs) but what then?
They continue with with their exclusive sale on Steam. There's really few downsides to remaining exclusively on Steam.
Quoting: RandomizedKirbyTree47I don't see why the game library is an obstacle to selling Steam Decks in brick-and-mortar retailers.
Agreed. There are other risks that could dissuade Valve. There's the increased rate of possible returns with brick and mortar. People are more motivated to do a return then they can travel back to the store. There's the loss of information control, with brick and mortar reporting sales, lack there of, and returns to their investors; something Valve doesn't have to do.
Quoting: itscalledrealityGen 1 hardware is never for the plebeians.
I'd be careful of wandering into some elitism here. You might think this is true and I might agree, but as I stare at the Steam store, I see the Deck mentioned 3 times, 2 prominently. It seems clear to me they believe differently.
Quoting: denyasisQuoting: itscalledrealityGen 1 hardware is never for the plebeians.
I'd be careful of wandering into some elitism here. You might think this is true and I might agree, but as I stare at the Steam store, I see the Deck mentioned 3 times, 2 prominently. It seems clear to me they believe differently.
I’m just being tongue in cheek. Valve’s goal is of course to sell as many of these as possible. It just usually takes a product generation or so before less technical people will comfortably not complain.
Last edited by itscalledreality on 30 July 2022 at 4:57 am UTC
Pleasant, since it will be a Christmas gift. :)
Last edited by 1xok on 30 July 2022 at 11:52 am UTC
Quoting: itscalledrealityI’m just being tongue in cheek. Valve’s goal is of course to sell as many of these as possible. It just usually takes a product generation or so before less technical people will comfortably not complain.
It is a PC. If you can't tell the difference in games, you can't appreciate it. The Steam Deck is clearly aimed at PC users and they are used to suffering. Even with Windows. :)
If you come from PC, the Steam Deck is already a huge relief.
Quoting: itscalledreality... suffering. Even with Windows. :)
The word you are looking for is "especially" ;)
Last edited by ShabbyX on 30 July 2022 at 1:21 pm UTC
It's great news to see valve increasing production as everyone I know is now hyped for and talking about steam deck.
Quoting: itscalledrealityQuoting: denyasisQuoting: itscalledrealityGen 1 hardware is never for the plebeians.
I'd be careful of wandering into some elitism here. You might think this is true and I might agree, but as I stare at the Steam store, I see the Deck mentioned 3 times, 2 prominently. It seems clear to me they believe differently.
I’m just being tongue in cheek. Valve’s goal is of course to sell as many of these as possible. It just usually takes a product generation or so before less technical people will comfortably not complain.
Oh, I see, my apologies. I think I was just reading your comment very literally, sorry about that.
Quoting: 1xokQuoting: itscalledrealityI’m just being tongue in cheek. Valve’s goal is of course to sell as many of these as possible. It just usually takes a product generation or so before less technical people will comfortably not complain.
It is a PC. If you can't tell the difference in games, you can't appreciate it. The Steam Deck is clearly aimed at PC users and they are used to suffering. Even with Windows. :)
If you come from PC, the Steam Deck is already a huge relief.
Windows aside, I think I agree a bit with itsacllesreality on the 1st Gen part, especially with it being a PC. 1st Gen PC gear does have a bit of a reputation of having issues. Whether or not that is still the case, we can debate, but I can honestly say it's affected my PC building choices over the past 20+ years. I tend to wait for late Gen1 refreshes when buying hardware, lol. Part of the reason I'm not considering a Deck at the moment (aside from the price).
I'm glad the rollout is going so smoothly so far, though.
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