Future VR plans — This isn’t the first time Valve’s connected the Steam Deck to its VR efforts. Valve CEO Gabe Newell has noted in interviews that the Steam Deck hardware could be seen as a “stepping stone” for powerful standalone VR hardware (perhaps a device like the Quest 2). Valve product designer Greg Coomer was also quoted as saying the custom AMD chip that powers the Steam Deck could certainly be used in VR hardware and is “very relevant to us and our future plans,” in an interview with The Verge.
Valve’s booklet make’s it clear that the company views all of its hardware experiments, from the Steam Controller, to the failure that was the Steam Machine, as integral to figuring out the Steam Deck. Clearly, the company sees the Steam Deck as something it wants to keep iterating on, but if history is any guide, the work on the Steam Deck will be influencing and informing all of Valve’s other projects for a long while.
The Steam storefront is still the major moneymaker for Valve, but after using the device and reading Valve’s thoughts about it, the Steam Deck sure seems like the company’s future.