Valve has released a new SteamOS update that enhances performance and frame rates for the Steam Deck and other Linux-based gaming devices. The changes focus on better hardware utilization and compatibility, leading to smoother gameplay in demanding titles. Published on December 19, 2025, the update underscores Valve's efforts to make Linux a stronger contender in portable gaming.
The latest SteamOS update, released on December 19, 2025, brings significant under-the-hood improvements to Valve's Linux-based operating system for handheld gaming. Primarily designed for the Steam Deck, it also benefits other Linux gaming devices by refining GPU scheduling, CPU load distribution, and resource management. These tweaks result in higher frame rates, greater stability, and cooler operation during extended play sessions.
Key enhancements include fixes for bugs that caused performance dips in intensive games, alongside updates to Proton for better compatibility with Windows-exclusive titles. Optimized for the AMD APU in the Steam Deck, the update improves thermal throttling and energy management, allowing sustained higher clock speeds with less battery drain. Newer Mesa graphics drivers support Vulkan and DirectX 12 via Proton, yielding frame rate gains of 5% to 20% in benchmarks.
Specific games show clear benefits: Cyberpunk 2077 now averages around 50 fps on medium settings with reduced fluctuations, while Elden Ring offers smoother frame pacing in combat. Baldur's Gate 3 and other AAA open-world titles experience fewer drops in dense scenes, indie games see lower input latency, and action titles deliver more consistent performance.
To install the update, users connect to Wi-Fi, go to Settings > System > Software Updates, and select Check for Updates, followed by a restart. Valve recommends backing up saves via Steam Cloud.
Looking ahead, Valve plans further graphics optimizations, expanded controller options, and easier dual-boot with Windows. Third-party handhelds from Ayaneo and GPD can adopt similar open-source improvements like Linux kernel and Mesa drivers. This release reinforces Linux's growing role in gaming, with tools like the built-in performance overlay helping users monitor fps boosts.