Daedalus

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 10 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Also the constant shelling of civilian population in Kherson ever since they've been pushed out. You know, the Kherson they say is part of Russia. (Same with Zaporizhia).

And they're not treating people of occupied territories as 'their people' anyway - no free movement with Russia itself.

(Also, you can't destroy a dam like this by 'shelling'. It takes a very big bomb or intentional demolition to do that, and Russians have been controlling the dam for a long time.)

EDIT: and they're shelling Kherson right now as evacuation is taking place.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago
  • X series - most complicated spacesims in existence (nothing realistic though)
  • Stellaris
  • Imperium Galactica 1 - a super-complicated 4x space DOS game - think Stellaris + SimCity + Command & Conquer
  • An obscure unpopular old game - Battle Isle: the Andosia War - or as one reviewer roughly said: "they must have had a board where everyone who came up with an idea got a golden piggie - it would work as 3 games: Battle Isle, Economy Isle, and Energypipe Isle, but this is just too much". Basically a turn-based but real-time strategy game (unit movement is turn-based, you can end your turn at any time but... resource extraction is real-time and if you run out of energy and water simultaneously you can't cool your power plant and you can't power your pumps). Also maintaining a supply-line behind your advancing army.
[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

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.