Valve releases new Steam Deck tools for developers

Valve announced two new data tools on April 23 to assist developers in optimizing games for Steam Deck. The features, available initially to creators of Verified games, include average framerate data and player surveys on rating agreement. Valve stated that 95 percent of surveyed players agree with the Verified status.

Valve published details of the tools in a Steamworks Development blog post. Developers with Verified Steam Deck games can now access average framerate data from the past 30 days for their titles on the handheld PC. The company plans to extend this feature to games rated as Playable in the future. Valve aims for these insights to help tune performance and stability on the platform. The second tool provides access to post-play surveys. Players who have run a Verified game for at least 10 minutes are asked whether they agree or disagree with its rating. If they disagree, they select reasons such as performance or stability issues. This feedback allows developers to assess the impact of recent updates on the Steam Deck experience. Valve highlighted that 95 percent of respondents agree with the Verified designations, based on the surveys collected so far.

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Realistic illustration of Valve's Steam Controller launching May 4 for $99, showcasing dual touchpads, TMR thumbsticks, and wireless Puck dongle on a sleek background.
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Valve's Steam Controller launches May 4 for $99 with low-latency Puck and Steam Deck-inspired design

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Valve's new Steam Controller, successor to the 2015 model and inspired by Steam Deck prototypes, launches May 4 for $99 in the US ($149 CAD, €99 EU, £85 UK, A$149 AU, 419 PLN PL). Featuring dual touchpads, TMR thumbsticks, and a wireless Puck dongle, it offers precise PC gaming while escaping hardware delays affecting Steam Machine and Frame.

New text strings in a recent Steam client update suggest Valve is developing a framerate estimator tool. The feature would allow users to view estimated performance charts for games based on their hardware configurations and data from other Steam users. It builds on Valve's efforts to improve game compatibility information.

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Valve is actively working on a Steam Deck 2, programmer Pierre-Loup Griffais has confirmed to IGN. The company wants silicon advancements that deliver true next-generation performance, which current system-on-chip options do not provide. No release is imminent due to these hardware limitations.

Valve has confirmed that its Steam Deck handheld gaming device is intermittently out of stock in some regions because of ongoing memory and storage shortages. These shortages, driven by AI industry demand, have also delayed the launch of new products like the Steam Machine and Steam Frame. The basic LCD model is now discontinued, raising the starting price.

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The upcoming Linux 7.0 kernel includes a specific adjustment to improve compatibility with Valve's Steam Deck handheld device. This change addresses EFI framebuffer issues on the popular gaming console. The update highlights ongoing efforts to enhance Linux support for consumer hardware.

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