The Steam Deck has revolutionized the gaming handheld market. With the Linux-based immutable SteamOS, Valve has fostered an active community developing mods and alternative systems for this platform. Other manufacturers distribute Windows-based mobile consoles. However, time and time again it has been shown that they lag behind Linux in terms of software support.
But how easy is it to bring a Linux distribution, say openSUSE, to the Steam Deck?
In this talk, a prototype based on openSUSE’s open technologies and infrastructure will be presented, which is already (almost) fully functional on the Steam Deck and many other devices.
My Grandpa used to say “Every farmer praises his pond.”
What’s wrong with just plain Arch? It works well enough for my desktop and for Valve to build SteamOS. When gaming having the latest packages are a huge advantage.
Unfortunately I can not watch the video right now
Edit: So he just made an atomic openSUSE distro for handhelds. I like that it has BTRFS snapshots, I use it on my desktop as well. Nice for people that prefer openSUSE I guess but I will stick to Arch.
The only distro I’ve never been able to successfully install without problems with the installer, over several versions and on several computers. Last time I gave up and haven’t thought about it since.
Deck runs arch, btw. It doesn’t need Suse.
Supposedly CachyOS works amazing on handhelds. Arch based, too.
I personally found it kinda jank. Mint feels best for a laymans gaming distro ime