Followed by SteamOS: Wheatley which appears to be better at first, but then after you interact with a slimmed down GLaDOS running on a potato you come to realize that they will just end up trying to kill you if you give them too much processing power.
It’s just not very general purpose right now. It’s Arch but the base system is set up as an immutable image. Here meaning any changes to the system are lost on updates. This includes stuff like the Nvidia drivers, so it’s my understanding it’s of little use for the majority of Steam’s install base. The kernel also isn’t strictly upstream and last I checked was rather dated with needed bits backported. If your PC however had newer hardware, it could mean you wait very long for support in SteamOS. Also I’m not sure there’s a generic installation process. They probably rather have device-specific images.
PC gamers already have plenty of choice with similar options, even HoloISO which is basically SteamOS with needed bits added. I’m not the biggest fan of SteamOS’ approach for a desktop system, and I’m not sure Valve would want to support this use case.
If Valve really wants gamers to get away from Windows, they need to release SteamOS 3.x.
That’s a big ask to have them release anything with a 3 in it.
SteamOS: GLaDOS then
Followed by SteamOS: Wheatley which appears to be better at first, but then after you interact with a slimmed down GLaDOS running on a potato you come to realize that they will just end up trying to kill you if you give them too much processing power.
Got to keep these bitches thirsty!
It’s just not very general purpose right now. It’s Arch but the base system is set up as an immutable image. Here meaning any changes to the system are lost on updates. This includes stuff like the Nvidia drivers, so it’s my understanding it’s of little use for the majority of Steam’s install base. The kernel also isn’t strictly upstream and last I checked was rather dated with needed bits backported. If your PC however had newer hardware, it could mean you wait very long for support in SteamOS. Also I’m not sure there’s a generic installation process. They probably rather have device-specific images.
PC gamers already have plenty of choice with similar options, even HoloISO which is basically SteamOS with needed bits added. I’m not the biggest fan of SteamOS’ approach for a desktop system, and I’m not sure Valve would want to support this use case.
this is the correct answer
They need to release an actual home console. Not the Steam Machine uncertainty they did a few years ago.
They have the software stack, they need a beefier APU that I’m certain AMD would be glad to provide, a controller based on the Deck, and they’re set.
It could sell in the tens of millions.