Playtron hopes to become the Linux-based operating system for gaming across handhelds, laptops, TVs, and, uh, in cars. According to the company, the PlaytronOS will be an improvement over Valve's own Linux-based gaming distro, SteamOS, because it won't be locked to a single storefront: it will be «compatible with every game store and many 3rd party integrations to come.»
Playtron calls itself «a light weight gaming OS optimized for a new generation of powerful handheld gaming PCs.» The company's website also calls out both Windows and SteamOS as being a poor fit for handheld gaming, and promises to be better.
The Playtron website is not particularly well written, which may go some way to explaining why it's calling out the SteamOS as locked to the «Valveverse» and solely compatible with Steam. That's not true—the second bit isn't, anyways, I'm not really sure what a Valveverse is. But you can launch other stores on the handheld: you have to go around Big Picture mode and onto the desktop to set it up, after which you can often add the launcher to Steam itself.
Since the Epic Games Launcher is unpleasant on Steam Deck, I use the third-party Heroic Launcher instead. I probably play more games on Heroic Launcher than I do on Steam on my Steam Deck these days, but it would be nice if those launchers were easier to access on Steam Deck out of the box. Same goes for GeForce Now, which I've been hoping would get some sort of official app on Steam Deck at some point, but to no avail.
Playtron's website suggests that's where it comes in. It claims to have managed to get «every game store» working on its own OS.
Playtron will be available to download on other handhelds, including the Steam Deck, and says it's in discussions with «OEMs and mobile operators to build and deploy Playtron devices around the world in the 2025 timeframe,» says founder and CEO Kirt McMaster, who previously set-up Cyanogen, an alternative to Android, to The Verge. Handheld maker Ayaneo is reportedly
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