With Valve revealing plans to launch new hardware, including a console, it might seem logical that the Steam Deck will eventually see some sort of successor, but simply put, the team isn’t gunning for that.
In an interview with IGN, Valve software engineer Pierre-Loup Griffais said as much, noting that Valve isn’t interested in small performance boosts for the future of the Steam Deck, instead, it wants big performance enhancements. It wants to make sure whatever upgrade comes next makes sense to be a standalone product, not being interested in getting things even to a point where it’s 50% more powerful at the same battery life.
โObviously the Steam Deckโs not our focus today, but the same things weโve said in the past where weโre really interested to work on whatโs next for Steam Deckโฆ the thing weโre making sure of is that itโs a worthwhile enough performance upgrade to make sense as a standalone product.
Weโre not interested in getting to a point where itโs 20 or 30 or even 50% more performance at the same battery life. We want something a little bit more demarcated than that. So weโve been working back from silicon advancements and architectural improvements, and I think we have a pretty good idea of what the next version of Steam Deck is going to be, but right now thereโs no offerings in that landscape, in the SOC landscape, that we think would truly be a next-gen performance Steam Deck.โ







