Friday, June 30th 2023
Steam Deck Gets Decent Price Cut During Steam Summer Sale
The Steam Deck handheld console has been once again discounted as a part of the Steam Summer Sale. The base 64 GB model is now priced at $359.10, a 10 percent discount from the usual $399 price. The 256 GB one is down by 15 percent to $449.65, and the top 512 GB model is discounted by 20 percent, down from $649 to $519.20.
This is a bigger discount compared to the one we have seen in March, especially for the 512 GB model. The promotion will run until the end of the Steam Summer Sale on July 13th. Steam has also published a list of the top 100 most-played games on Steam Deck this year, and some of them are also a part of the Summer Sale. These include Hogwarts Legacy, Vampire Survivors, Elden Ring, Resident Evil 4, The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt, Red Dead Redemption 2, Cyberpunk 2077, and many more.
Source:
Steam Store
This is a bigger discount compared to the one we have seen in March, especially for the 512 GB model. The promotion will run until the end of the Steam Summer Sale on July 13th. Steam has also published a list of the top 100 most-played games on Steam Deck this year, and some of them are also a part of the Summer Sale. These include Hogwarts Legacy, Vampire Survivors, Elden Ring, Resident Evil 4, The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt, Red Dead Redemption 2, Cyberpunk 2077, and many more.
30 Comments on Steam Deck Gets Decent Price Cut During Steam Summer Sale
I have the better-part of my game library on my 1TB-upgraded Deck, but I've used it more as an HTPC and Laptop substitute.
If someone was willing to keep a BT KB/M handy, they're surprisingly competent at 'being a PC'.
Despite the deeper discount, you can ABSOLUTELY get yourself a 256GB M.2 2230 SSD for less than the €89/$90 difference. Hell, you can definitely get 512GB and keep the change.
As for the 512GB version, that does come with the anti-glare etched glass screen but you can get a good-quality anti-glare film adhered to your base model for under ten bucks. For the $160/€166 difference you can buy a 2TB WD740 SSD and have enough change left over to buy a steam dock, or bluetooth key+mouse combo. The screen is fine. It's no worse than most laptops and cheaper IPS tablets and the backlight bleed is barely noticeable - I'd say it's definitely one of the better examples of a small form-factor IPS panel.
Similar devices with better screens seem to have abysmal battery life so for the portable, untethered experience the Steam Deck excels at, I'm not sure "nicer" screens are actually better given their negative impact on battery runtimes.
The effective screen quality is zero when the battery is dead, so I'd rather have an adequate image quality for an extra hour, thanks.
The fact that The Steam Deck was a crystalization of a device I'd been dreaming of since childhood, trumped my better senses.
Thankfully, that lil thing has been quite useful and well-enjoyed, even hardly ever gaming on it or even using the Custom SteamOS interface. It's almost always in 'desktop mode'.
The SN740 isn't a consumer drive so you wont find it at retail unless it's Amazon Marketplace which is where you go if you want to get scalped.
AliExpress is one middle-man closer to the source and these days it's almost more reputable than a UK company, simply because the seller doesn't get paid by AliExpress until the customer marks it as "delivered and as expected".