![]() ![]() In a chat with PC Gamer this week, Valve Steam Deck designer Greg Coomer said that “there’s work looking at TPM just now,” and that “it’s also a conversation that’s going on with AMD to make sure that, at the BIOS level, we can accommodate that.”Ĭoomer went on to confirm, “So there’s nothing to indicate to us yet that there’ll be any issues with Windows 11.” This is really only for the people that’ll eventually plan on moving past SteamOS if they want to turn the Steam Machine into a retro emulator of games from other brands – but it might end up being a moot point. Valve appears to be aiming to make SteamOS 3.0 so very simple, essential, and powerful that the user of a Steam Deck won’t want to use any other sort of operating system. ![]() They can choose to run SteamOS, based on Linux, or they can choose to dig deep in the code and run whatever software they deem necessary. One of Valve’s selling points with this Steam Deck machine is that the user, the buyer, the owner of the machine can do with it what they like. ![]()
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