The Steam Deck has been put through a torture test to determine its durability, with Valve’s handheld doing well for the most part – with one exception (kind of).
The testing was performed by YouTube hardware destruction specialist JerryRigEverything, who took a blade to the Steam Deck’s case, as well as scratching and burning the display, and trying to bend the whole device to see if it would break.
And Valve’s mini gaming PC came through this host of tests with flying colors, pretty much, with the bend test, and applying a flame to the screen, all making no odds to the Deck which just shrugged off the punishment.
There was one weak point picked out, as the title of the video suggests, and that’s the upgraded (etched) screen on the top-end (512GB) Steam Deck, which didn’t fare so well in scratch tests with Mohs’ hardness picks.
The YouTuber observed that the upgraded anti-glare screen isn’t that great under bright light anyway, and theorized that Valve would’ve been better off adding a little extra brightness to the display in order to make it more visible when in a brightly lit environment.
Doubtless this video clip makes for difficult watching for those who are in the pre-order queue to get a Steam Deck, with the device being much in demand, and some folks having to wait until much later in 2022 before they receive their hardware. For those long-suffering gamers, seeing one of Valve’s handhelds getting scratched, scraped, bent and burned can’t have been easy…
The point JerryRigEverything raises about the etched glass not being worth it is an arguable one. As far as we’re concerned, the anti-glare effect is worth having, and does make a difference in reducing reflections – even if it isn’t major enough to justify having to
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