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Getting my first steam deck tomorrow

Getting my steam deck tomorrow. Already had Linux like steam deck on my laptop a while ago (didn't work well because fuck Nvidia)

But wanted to know what you all think is important to put on a steam deck, that's not something that's not what duckduckgo says with the websites it has. (I worded that horribly)

What are some niche things can I could do/install/play on the steam deck that most people wouldn't really do or think about doing?

I don't know a lot about Linux as I wish but I know a ok ish amount. Just wanting to find anything really interesting or useful to do with my steam deck

Also anybody know any casual games I can play randomly on public transit and don't have to sit down and play. Things that I can just easily stop. (Something like balentro kinda way you can just stop whenever)

45 comments
    • Use the device as is. It doesn't need a lot of tinkering. But in case you see your fav game is tagged as "unsupported", check out the game on protondb.com. Chances are it's probably well supported.
    • If you intend to travel a lot with the device, you can buy an Apple AirTag or Tile
    • The device is excellent for indie games, 2d/platformers
    • If you want to connect it to your living room TV or use it as a gaming console, you can buy a dock and a pair of controllers. Great for local play.
  • Setup Nixpkgs. Learn Home-Manager. If anything doesn't exist on Flathub, install it through Nixpkgs instead of disabling immutability and resorting to pacman only to have it wiped after an update. And for temporary tinkering, use nix-shell.

    The determinate.systems Nix installer directly supports the Steam Deck.

    • Never used Nixpkgs, but isn’t it a bit more advanced and not really for beginners?

      • Comparatively, yes. But trying to install apps or programs on the Deck if they are not on Flathub is quite a common use-case, I find. And it's a lot more stable and less frustrating than temporarily installing packages through Pacman!

    • as a nixos user.... dear sweet Dog, no, please no

  • 1 - Check the headphone jack

    2 - Buy a decent screen protector

    3 - Enjoy it

    Optional > Use a cheap dock and a bluetooth controller (don't wast money on the original) x a great console experience from your tv. Also great for watch movies and youtube with adblock.

  • First off, welcome! You’ll love the steam deck. I don’t have any specific hidden gems but if you’re planning on using this a lot on public transit, look for smaller games to play like Dredge. Anything too intensive will drain your battery a ton faster than a smaller game. Plus it will heat up and fans will be going bbrrrrrrr. May be worth getting a portable power bank if you can’t charge on transit. Also the largest SD card you can get to add to that puppy. Enjoy!

    • Regarding battery, learn how to utilize power draw slider. Unless necessary, play games on 30-60 FPS. Your battery will thank you for that.

  • If you find yourself taking and sharing a lot of screenshots outside of Steam. Install the Shotty plugin for Decky Loader to have then organized and accessible without needing to dig into Proton prefixes.

    And then, access your ~/Pictures/Screenshots folder over SFTP from your phone or some other PC for efficient shitposting!

    P.S. I use Solid Explorer on Android for SFTP.

    P P.S. Set up SSH as soon as you can. It's saved me a lot of effort when I boot-looped my Deck by creating a bunch of circular symlinks 🙃

  • I'd it's an OLED model, test the headphone jack. Many decks have constant hiss/static/noise on that port - you can get it RMA'd if you contact support, but that means you'll be sending it away for 10 days or so to get sound board replaced.

    Other than that, I recommend installing DECKY which is an ad on that in turn allows installing useful plugging such as incorporating deck compatibility rating into games displayed, better power management, etc

  • Also anybody know any casual games I can play randomly on public transit and don’t have to sit down and play. Things that I can just easily stop. (Something like balentro kinda way you can just stop whenever)

    The beauty of the Steam Deck for me is that any non-online game can now be played in short sessions. I like a lot of jrpgs, but I've gotten stuck in cut scene/boss fight sequences that last 1+ hours without being able to save and stop. The Steam deck is amazing for games like this, because I can literally suspend at any point and then pick right back up where I left off. Being able to play a game without having to worry about running out of time or accidentally getting myself into a part of the game I can't stop has really freed me up to play a lot more games.

45 comments