If you look at the 3 console manufacturers, you’ll notice a pattern. Switch OLED was announced 3 months before release. Ps4 pro was announced 2 months before its release. Xbox one x was announced 5 months before release.

The steam deck OLED? 7 days

The reason that manufacturers give consumers at least a couple months before a release of a new device is so they can feel they made an informed decision on their purchase, and not feel burned when the next iteration is released. No, the device they currently have doesn’t lose inherent value to them. However, knowing that the next thing is coming out in just a couple weeks could make informed consumers hold off for the sale of the now outdated model.

Also inb4 people say “but it’s not a console…”, PC manufacturers have pretty consistent hardware release schedules as well, so the comparison stands.

The fact is this is an established norm for other manufacturers and that valve went against just comes across as anti consumer. And I think that just surprised a lot of people since Gabe’s whole “piracy is almost always a service problem…” Take and the return policy on games make the company appear as super consumer centric, however this release feels out of character.

  • RincewendB
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    1 year ago

    I think that’s a bad take. It changes NOTHING. All it does is shift the upset buyers slightly further back in time.

    If Lenovo hadn’t developed the Legion Go, Valve probably would have announced the update earlier. Valve’s primary interest was to kick start a console adjacent PC market segment. This increases revenue while serving customers. Having multiple manufacturers in the space is nothing but good for them. It is completely unnecessary to rain on Lenovo’s launch activity and Valve chose not to do so.