Valve’s gaming handheld is called the Steam Deck and it’s shipping in December

Valve just announced the Steam Deck, its long-rumored Switch-like handheld gaming device. It will begin shipping in December and reservations open July 16th at 1PM ET. It starts at $399, and you can buy it in $529 and $649 models as well.

The device has an AMD APU containing a quad-core Zen 2 CPU with eight threads and AMD RDNA 2 graphics, alongside 16GB of LPDDR5 RAM. There are three different types of storage: 64GB eMMC storage, 256GB NVMe SSD storage, and 512GB of high-speed NVME SSD storage, according to Valve. You can also expand the available storage using the available high-speed microSD card slot.

A rear view of the devices showing off its four grip buttons, triggers, bumpers, vents and Switch-esque design.

The Steam Deck has a huge number of control options. There are two thumbsticks, two small trackpads beneath the thumbsticks, ABXY buttons, a D-pad, and a 7-inch touchscreen. Like the Switch, it also has two shoulder triggers on each side, and there are four back buttons (two on each side) as well.

On the software side of things, the Steam Deck runs what Valve is calling “a new version of SteamOS,” that its optimized for the handheld’s mobile form factor. But the actual OS is based on Linux, and will utilize Proton as a compatibility layer to allow Windows-based games to run without requiring that developers specifically port them for the Steam Deck.

Ultimately, though, the Steam Deck is still a full fledged Linux computer, meaning that more technical users will be able to jump out to the regular Linux desktop, too. Valve You can also install and use PC software, of course. Browse the web, watch streaming video, do your normal productivity stuff, install some other game stores, whatever.

Valve notes that the Steam Deck’s features are designed to emulate the regular Steam app on desktop, complete with chat, notifications, cloud save support, and all of your library, collections, and favorites all kept in sync. And if you want more power, you’ll be able to stream games to the Steam Deck directly from your gaming PC using Valve’s Remote Play feature.

When pre-orders for all three versions open on Friday afternoon, they’ll initially be available only to accounts with purchases on Steam before June 2021, in a bid to keep reseller bots at bay. There’s also a reservation fee, and one pre-order per person. In December the first units will be available in the United States, Canada, the European Union, and the United Kingdom, with other areas following in 2022.

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