

Controls and buttons are adequately large for adult hands. The ergonomics of the SteamDeck are great, I hold it in one hand sideways just fine without fear of it slipping out of my hand. The resolution is perfect, I probably wouldn't notice much if it got boosted. In summary, as the list points out, there's certainly no shortage of things to play, I already have hundreds of games ready to play and they've all performed above my expectations. It's silly and a ridiculous use-case that would never be practical in its current iteration but I do wonder.
#Portal turret figures software#
Obviously the software stack is fine for it. It would make a great Linux video to learn if someone using a dGPU over USB could theoretically run VR. while I'm not sure the game is worth all the money you have to sink into a system, if you already have it. Played through the entire game with no hiccups on a 2080RTX + Index. It does, by the way, work flawlessly natively. I do find it amusing that Half-Life: Alyx is on that list. What saddens me is the occasional one that works fine / better native, but defaults to Proton on the Steam Deck. We get more native titles than some people think we do.For sure there is a nice number of native games out there. Incidentally, 25 of them, exactly half, are Native, not even counting Tomb Raider. I'd say that's particularly clear for Alyx, eh?īottom line: While only 43/50 of those titles are currently "Playable" or better on the Steam Deck, already a pretty dashed good figure, all 50 can be played on Linux. Presumably their Unsupported category is about specifically Deck-related issues, not Linux-related issues.

That leaves only the three Unsupported as definitely not workable on the Deck-but note that even that doesn't mean they don't work on Linux period, since all three of those Unsupported are actually Linux native. So presumably it wouldn't take much for all four of those to become Playable. Quoting: Purple Library GuyIt's interesting that of the Unchecked, two are Gold on ProtonDB and two are native.

That's pretty great.īe sure to check out and follow the GamingOnLinux YouTube for plenty of guides and videos. For desktop Linux users, the ProtonDB rating was added too (if it's not Native) which goes Platinum - Gold - Silver - Bronze - Unsupported.Īnother interesting thing I noticed only recently, the Steam Top 250 website also has a dedicated Steam Deck Verified section for the top 250 titles there too. As a reminder though, there are quite a few that are Playable or Unsupported that really do work fine. For the rating, I'm sticking to Valve's official Deck Verified position for now. Making use of the wonderful Steam 250 website, taking a snapshot of the titles listed on July 12, here's what you can expect to see on Steam Deck and 99% will work fine on Linux desktops too of course, since the Steam Deck is powered by Linux. You may receive duplicates.Recently I went over the top 100 most-played games on Steam by player count but what about the most highly rated games on Steam? Here's how the top 50 most positively reviewed Steam games work on Steam Deck. We cannot accept requests for specific items, nor can we accept returns on opened items. This 4-pack contains 4 individually packaged mini-figures (subject to change).
#Portal turret figures plus#
Pack includes 4 Portal figures! Let these series 3 Portal 2 Sentry Turret Mini-Figures keep your work desk valuables safe from envious eyes! These 3-inch collectible mini-figures feature both Open and Closed versions of 5 unique design patterns to provide discreet protection in a variety of environments, plus Weighted Cubes and Spheres like the Weighted Companion Cube or Wheatley! The automated security systems and other Aperture testing objects previously only available to secret government facilities are now available to the public with these Portal 2 Sentry Turret Series 3 Mini-Figures! Ages 14 and up.Mini-figures measure up to 3-inches tall.Sentry Turrets and other objects from the video game Portal 2!.Portal 2 Sentry Turret Series 3 Mini-Figure 4-Pack:
