Quote from: Anonymousgg on March 13, 2023, 21:44:51Any gains would be appreciated, but as long as most new games can hit 720p30 with low settings, the Steam Deck's current SoC is fine. Focusing on increasing battery life and keeping price points low will help them move more units. The more Steam Decks they sell, the more likely developers are to optimize for it.
When they finally launch a new version with a better CPU and 2-4x the GPU performance, that can help them keep up with current games and push the settings up. Nothing above 1080p60 is likely to matter for mobile use, but maybe FSR could be used to hit higher resolutions when docked (or generate some fake frames).
With the current chip it's really a power/cooling constraint. If it weren't soldered on and you could pop it onto a board with a big air cooler and ~100 watts power, it'd perform close to the PS5 at 1080p and almost identical to AMDs zen2 APU's, which can do most modern games at 1080p 60 medium to the lower end of high settings. The hardware is genuinely great for the price.
Having to cool all of that though in a handheld format, hold a power source in it that can game for reasonable time frames is where it got really complicated and held back. There's not a big market for the LTT hot-rod cooling mod setup, but it certainly was impressive.
I think Valve is keenly aware that they over provisioned in some areas though. It gives them leeway for the next few years because there's plenty of ways to up performance, if marginally in most situations, through software updates alone. Some of the more complex Proton+DXVK tricks they've pulled have already been pretty impressive. Probably most well known since it was their first big one was the Elden Ring frame timing fix in DXVK. It's easier to notice when comparing windows desktop to Linux desktop, but even on the Steam Deck with lower settings to get 30+ FPS, the frame timing is still noticeably better than on Windows.
Valves been doing the Linux thing as a side gig for a while now, and they're definitely getting good at it. I bet we keep seeing lots of unseen unless you go looking for them fixes like that which will improve performance as much as they can. Then my hope is they come out with a slightly OC'd docked mode (or I guess high power charger) that gives a little more power. Mostly for using while docked to a TV for instance. But maybe a Dock 2.0 that helps with the cooling would be a necessity to ensure temps don't get too high.
Guess we just get to wait and see what Valve does though. If there's one thing Valve has always been great at, it's being incapable of keeping it's userbase updated regularly. So I'll be setting my alerts to run on Valve-Time.