You can now buy a refurbished Steam Deck straight from Valve — if it’s in stock

2 weeks ago 1

By Patrick Hearn Published December 11, 2024 10:02 AM

Final Fantasy VII Rebirth running on the Steam Deck. Jacob Roach / Digital Trends

Have you wanted to buy a Steam Deck, but aren’t sure about the price? The $399 LCD model is the least expensive, but it’s worth a little extra for the Steam Deck OLED, which offers double or even quadruple the onboard memory. Good news: You can now buy a refurbished Steam Deck directly from Valve. Fair warning: These are selling like hotcakes on the coldest day of the year. At the time of writing, you could pick up a 512GB Steam Deck OLED for just $439, or a 1TB version for $519.

So what does refurbished mean, exactly? According to Steam, the units are put through all the same tests as brand-new retail units, and each Steam Deck receives a factory reset, software update, and thorough examination. All of the different systems are checked and tested, including the battery.

In fact, it’s possible to get a potentially improved Steam Deck when buying refurbished, as Valve says “all refurbished units meet or even exceed the performance standards of new retail units.” That said, the Steam Decks could come with a few scratches or scuffs, but the damage is purely cosmetic.

A white Steam Deck with the screen turned on sitting on a blue background.Valve

All refurbished units come with the same one-year warranty as a new one, a refurbished power supply, and the carrying case and quick-start guide.

Get your weekly teardown of the tech behind PC gaming

Valve’s refurbished offers are here just in time for the holidays, with an estimated delivery time of three to five business days. It’s not a bad price when you can pick up a much higher-end unit for just slightly more than the base model.

The Steam Deck has a lot to offer, especially if you’d like to take your favorite PC games with you on the go (it can run non-Steam games, too). It also supports mods, so you can take that 24-mod Stardew Valley save that you’ve been working toward and play it on the train.

Patrick Hearn

Patrick Hearn writes about smart home technology like Amazon Alexa, Google Assistant, smart light bulbs, and more. If it's a…

You might want to wait a bit to play Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 on Steam

 Black Ops 6 multiplayer.

It's Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 launch day, which means potentially millions of players are hopping into the new single-player campaign, the updated multiplayer mode, and Zombies. While posts online about the performance of the game seem to be minimal, there have been reported issues on PC, specifically via Steam.

It's been a common story lately about players being mad at third-party launchers on Steam, and that remains the case for Black Ops 6. Call of Duty's is called Call of Duty HQ (COD HQ), and it's a hub for players to manage their game installs, whether they want to only download certain game modes or launch a specific game. It seems as if players can only switch between modes through the launcher and have to go through multiple menus to boot the game up. In the worst cases, they can't launch the game at all.

Read more

Steam Deck 2: everything we know so far

Steam Deck held between two hands.

It's a matter of when we'll see the Steam Deck 2, not if we'll see it. Valve has talked publicly multiple times about its plans for a next-gen Steam Deck, which shouldn't come as a surprise given that the original is easily the best handheld gaming PC you can buy.

Although the Steam Deck 2 is still a few years off, Valve has been dropping hints about the handheld for a while. Here's everything we know about the Steam Deck 2 right now, from the possible release date to details on specs and performance.
Steam Deck 2: release date speculation

Read more

Valve won’t release a Steam Deck 2 until there’s a proper ‘generational leap’

Steam Deck over a pink background.

Don't expect a Steam Deck 2 any time soon -- or at least, not within the year. While Valve has confirmed that it's working on an official follow-up to its popular handheld console, it's against the idea of annual hardware releases.

In an interview with Reviews.org (spotted by The Verge), Steam Deck designers Lawrence Yang and Yazan Aldehayyat weighed in on the product's future. While they said they approve of competition in the space and how they can (and in some cases have) improve on the Steam Deck foundation, they're not going to follow the trend of releasing new versions with incremental improvements.

Read more

Read Entire Article