Thursday, November 9th 2023
Valve Updates the Steam Deck with OLED Display, Overhauled Internals
Valve has announced an updated version of the Steam Deck and the headline feature is the new 7.4-inch OLED display. That's a mere 0.4-inches bigger than the original Steam Deck LCD display and it retains the same 1280 x 800 resolution. However, everything else related to the display has been improved and the refresh rate is now 90 Hz rather than 60 Hz. The display is also a lot brighter, with an SDR rating of 600 nits and an HDR rating of 1000 nits. Valve also claims a 110 percent P3 colour gamut, a one million to one contrast ratio and a sub 0.1 ms response time. On top of that, Valve has added what the company calls "high performance touch" which is said to improve the responsiveness of the display.
It's not just the display that has been improved, as Valve has moved to a 6 nm AMD Zen 2 based SoC which seems to allow the GPU to run at 1.6 GHz at all times, as Valve no longer lists a frequency range for the GPU. The power envelope remains the same though, with a range of 4-15 Watts. Paired with the new SoC is faster LPDDR5 memory at 6400 MT/s, up from 5500 MT/s, which should provide a small boost in gaming performance. An improved cooling solution is also part of the package, which is also likely a reason for the more constant GPU clocks. Gone are the entry level storage SKUs and the OLED version of the Steam Deck only comes with 512 GB or 1 TB of internal storage. The WiFi and Bluetooth module has also been overhauled and now supports WiFi 6E and Bluetooth 5.3. The battery has also been boosted from a 40 Whr pack to a 50 Whr pack and Valve now claims three to 12 hours of battery life during gaming, as well as faster charging times. Finally the weight has dropped by 29 grams, which might not be much, but still impressive considering the larger battery pack. The downside you ask? That would be the price, as Valve is asking for US$549/€569 for the 512 GB version, with the 1 TB coming at US$649/€679 when it becomes available on the 16th of November.
Source:
Valve
It's not just the display that has been improved, as Valve has moved to a 6 nm AMD Zen 2 based SoC which seems to allow the GPU to run at 1.6 GHz at all times, as Valve no longer lists a frequency range for the GPU. The power envelope remains the same though, with a range of 4-15 Watts. Paired with the new SoC is faster LPDDR5 memory at 6400 MT/s, up from 5500 MT/s, which should provide a small boost in gaming performance. An improved cooling solution is also part of the package, which is also likely a reason for the more constant GPU clocks. Gone are the entry level storage SKUs and the OLED version of the Steam Deck only comes with 512 GB or 1 TB of internal storage. The WiFi and Bluetooth module has also been overhauled and now supports WiFi 6E and Bluetooth 5.3. The battery has also been boosted from a 40 Whr pack to a 50 Whr pack and Valve now claims three to 12 hours of battery life during gaming, as well as faster charging times. Finally the weight has dropped by 29 grams, which might not be much, but still impressive considering the larger battery pack. The downside you ask? That would be the price, as Valve is asking for US$549/€569 for the 512 GB version, with the 1 TB coming at US$649/€679 when it becomes available on the 16th of November.
124 Comments on Valve Updates the Steam Deck with OLED Display, Overhauled Internals
www.ign.com/articles/steam-deck-oled-interview-valve-reveals-how-the-oled-model-came-together
Things will surely change for the Steam Deck 2 since they can plan ahead and maybe ally (no pun intended) with other OEMs to have a panel more fitting for it.
Who's the one that's childish?
www.techpowerup.com/forums/threads/steam-deck-owners-clubhouse.291802/post-5139693 90hz OLED is similar to 120hz IPS, just fyi, the motion clarity improvements from high refresh are derived from a mix of high refresh itself and pixel latency/response, OLED has 0.1ms pixel response/latency
Also i had the pleasure to experience the Alienware curved OLED monitor at 165hz and OMG. I’m spoiled and ready to get rid everything non LCD screen out of my house lol. To give an obvious example, the gaming company that Microsoft just bought. Not all of their games work in Linux and I play their online games regularly with friends and Xbox Live which you can do on Linux but it’s not as seamless on Windows.
The enticement is now higher for the higher models that is true, but I think what is most important that there is still the £350 model available for those where that is their budget limit. The problem with the older higher priced models is I dont think they offered enough higher value at the higher price points. It also keeps me happy about my existing purchase, as I only brought the £350 model a couple of months ago.
That's one reason I want to upgrade now, because I don't want 1080p in this form factor. 800p on glossy panel non-matte looks very sharp to me (matte makes it less sharp, as well as the colors pop less on matte screens) I am 100% buying the $549 OLED launch day.
Or in fact any modern smartphone? You've just described every flagship from apple and samsung for the past few years.
When Microsoft released the Xbox 360 slim, they were proud of matching closely the performance of the original model by crippling the chip
The reason I like the APU didnt get changed as it keeps a consistent performance target, and that any optimisations done on Steam OS will stay relevant for the older deck's, this is a good policy. For those who want more there is alternative products.
But of course the day will come (it seems probably 2 years) when there will be a more powerful deck 2. I am 100% with them when they say less frequent and more meaningful updates are better.