Custom built pc.
Gaming
From video gaming to card games and stuff in between, if it's gaming you can probably discuss it here!
Please Note: Gaming memes are permitted to be posted on Meme Mondays, but will otherwise be removed in an effort to allow other discussions to take place.
See also Gaming's sister community Tabletop Gaming.
This community's icon was made by Aaron Schneider, under the CC-BY-NC-SA 4.0 license.
I don't play games with much frequency, but I play on some combination of Steam Deck and a desktop running OpenSUSE Tumbleweed, a Linux distro.
Edits/Changes: Forgot to specify Tumbleweed.
Ps4, pc and mobile.
Obligatory "Fuck Google" for killing Stadia.
Stadia was great. No monthly fee. Good enough selection of games. If they had put literally any effort into it, they could've done amazing.
It was cool of Google to give me my money back for my games.
I play some games on my ps3 bit I also use my computer for newer games and emulators
Mostly PC (Linux), sometimes Switch. I also have a Raspberry Pi as a retro console emulator for old stuff like the original The Legend of Zelda.
I only play on my Steam Deck and/or on my Desktop running Arch(btw)
Desktop Specs: OS: Arch Linux CPU: Intel i7-9700K GPU: Intel Arc A770 Limited Edition RAM: 2x8GB 3600 MHz
Arch Linux (btw)
(on desktop not a laptop or anything)
Mostly my computer, but I've also got my PS3 beside me on the desk. For the whole family to use elsewhere is a PS5, Xbox Series X, Switch, and Wii U together, and yonder elsewhere is a PS2, N64, and a Sega Genesis. Sounds like a lot, and I also think we oughta slim that down. Too much stuff that not enough of us use to justify it.
Mainly mobile gaming with a Samsung Tab S6, with pc games via Nvidia Geforce.
I don't really play enough PC games to justify a gaming rig/laptop.
Primarily my gaming PC, but it's getting pretty old. AMD FX-8350, 16GB RAM, GeForce 1050Ti, lots of storage.
In the living room I have a Switch and Steam Deck, I play the Steam Deck more lately, mostly for co-op games like Stardew and Brawlhalla.
Oh and I still have my fat PS3 hooked up in the living room, played some Rock Band on it this weekend.
Primary is now Steam Deck.
PC is pretty much used for work and installing games to move to the Steam Deck.
Local transfer is a nice feature!
Steam Deck or one of my Linux machines.
Primary machine:
Fedora 38 CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 3600 (12) @ 3.600GHz GPU: AMD ATI Radeon RX 5600 OEM/5600 XT / 5700/5700 XT Memory: 7043MiB / 15899MiB
Also have a little NUC and an older machine. All on Linux.
How do you like the steam deck? I could see myself getting one someday
As another steam deck user (~1 year of 1-4h daily usage):
performance/compatibility:
- modern AAA games can be played but expect low settings and 30FPS. I don't play many of those so it's not a problem
- indies work, with good battery life
- old PC games work well, e.g. Fallout 2 on Steam out of the box - the trackpads are important here to replace mouse. Don't expect to play a micro-heavy RTS though.
- AAA games from 2012-2020 (~PS4 generation) work with good enough battery life for my commute (~1+1h)
- setup of emulators is trivial with EmuDeck
- switch emulation works (a recent yuzu update bumped performance to 'as good as switch' for almost everything.
- PS2, PSP, Wii (and everything older) emulation works, but don't expect PS3 to work
- most multiplayer games with anticheat don't work
- modding windows games (outside those with Steam Workshop support) is impractical, you need to go into desktop mode and mess with the particular proton 'bottle' for that game
- adding third-party games is easy (add the game's binary to steam and tell it which Proton to use)
ergonomics/size:
- it's big, not laptop big, but a backpack is the most practical way to carry it (I carry it with my work laptop)
- It's really comfortable to hold - personally it's more comfortable than my Logitech F710 (controller) - but I have big hands
reliability/stability:
- no SW issues so far, good cadence of updates
- no analog stick drift so far
- no measurable battery degradation so far
hardware:
- not the easiest device to take apart (e.g. if you want to upgrade the SSD)
other:
- a good big uSD card may be preferable to buying the most expensive model, I have e.g. Witcher 3 on an uSD card and loading is (subjectively) fast enough.
- steam has per-game controller schemes which you can download from other users, this is especially convenient for strategy games where there's no 'common scheme'
- you can set screen refresh rate and FPS limit per-game, e.g. for turn-based games I go way down with FPS (~20) to save battery
- people complain about the screen, IMO it's comparable with any 'normal', non-OLED monitor
There's also a considerable dev community around Steam Deck, e.g. decky-loader for plugins, and already mentioned EmuDeck.
for me it's one of:
- PS5
- Xbox Series X
- Steam Deck
- Switch
- Analogue Pocket
- Analogue Super Nt
- PS Vita
- PS3
- 3DS
not really by order of preference, but i guess how much i've used them recently