This is essentially what the official Valve Steam Deck Dock is going to look like, though probably not exactly like it. All we've got out of Gabe's gang so far are these pretty renders. Still, along with the Dock tech specs Valve released with the original Deck reveal, we do know a fair bit about the upcoming Deck Dock.
But when's it coming? So far all we know is that Valve says: «It won't be happening as early as we wanted, but we're excited to talk more about it soon and are planning to make them available in late spring.»
Late spring is a fair way away, and technically that could take us all the way into June territory if it goes to the wire.
So, what will the Deck Dock offer that other docks can't deliver to the Steam Deck? Basically… somewhere for it to stand while it's plugged in. That's about it. Still, I'm happy enough with that so long as the price is right, because during my testing I've been using it as my work PC, outputting to a screen in the office, and plumbed into a keyboard and mouse for the tapping and the clicking. All that via the existing Dell D6000 docking stations that litter the PC Gamer offices.
But I'm a dual-screener, even with the ickle 7-inch screen of the Steam Deck, and I was digging having my emails and Slack on the Deck while I worked on the main screen. The downside of plugging it into a third-party dock is that I have to find something workable to lean my Deck against so I can actually see it.
Having a bespoke unit for Valve's handheld to snuggle into—while it's charging and outputting and doing all that alternative use case stuff I love about the device—will make the Deck Dock an actually pretty useful peripheral.
Aside from a handy cradle, you also get a USB Type-A Gen3.1 port, two
Read more on pcgamer.com