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报告翻译问题
What I do care about is having yet another Windows installation to update and maintain. I used to have a dedicated media center pc that I got rid of because I was tired of maintaining mumltiple Windows installations. So the ease of use and amazing integration of SteamOS is amazing for me. Add to that battery life and a subjectively more comfortable size and form factor.
A last point to consider is compatibility. Take your top 5 games you'll play on it. Are some of those Windows store or on Uplay, .... ? In that case an Ally or Legion will just out of the box work better with less hassle. (You can get a lot to run on the deck too using emulation, desktop mode or installing windows, but keyword hassle).
Many of the older games I play are designed for mouse and keyboard. There really isn't any comparison to using the track pad over a thumbstick for mouse control. At least not for me.
If the Steam Deck ever gets rid of the track pads, then I will have to reconsider my options.
That said, the entry point of the Deck is $400 new, for a 256GB model now. IIRC, around $520 for the 512GB. The Ally starts at $600 (for the gimped Z1 model) and $700 for the full version of the Ally and the Legion Go.
If these and a few others are games you really want to play on the go, get a Legion Go or ROG Ally. If not, get a Deck.
I believe RT was merged after many revisions
https://www.phoronix.com/news/RADV-Batch-Accel-RT
https://www.phoronix.com/news/RADV-RT-Default-Mesa-23.2
The feature was only enabled a few months ago. It might not make it for Steam OS 3.5.