this post was submitted on 06 Nov 2024
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Because it's a console, not a portable PC.
The switch offers a console experience. Everything just works and works well.
The deck offers a console-like experience. The majority of PC games work, some may have issues, some may not be suited to the form factor. You can play console games on it but not out of the box.
I say this as someone who doesn't own a switch and uses their deck every night. I absolutely see the type of person who would buy a switch and the type of person who would buy a deck. They both have valid points for doing so and I'd never recommend the other device to them.
Backwards compatibility on both Xbox and PlayStation cause problems as well.
By default Steam Deck users are presented with the "Best on Deck" tab in the store which is for verified games only.
Deck allows for tinkering and unverified games but it's not the default experience. As a daily Deck user you should be aware of that.
When it comes to playing Hades, Balatro or Brotato, I have had zero issues with the deck. It is literally a console experience there. Verified (green) games will just work and are indictive of a console experience. Playable games (yellow) dont represent a console experience. Small text, having to bring up a keyboard manually, launchers.. these things arent something you'd see on a console. Unverified games and emulation require the most tinkering and thats when you really get to experience it as a PC.
In its default state, playing only verified games, only in handheld mode, without external controllers - the deck is a fine machine and offers a console experience. Dock it to a TV, start using more controllers, fiddle with yellow games and that experience is gone. I absolutely appreciate I have the option to do so and not be locked out of it - thats why im a Deck person and not a Switch one.
My point is the deck cant replace a switch and the switch cant replace a deck. They complement each other fine.
Not to mention, a major reason why people buy Nintendo consoles is to play first-party Nintendo games. Sure, it's possible to emulate those titles on PC and probably the Deck, but a lot of people either don't know how or don't want to invest the time, money or effort to do so when they know the game will just work on the intended console.