I've been enjoying some quality time with the office Steam Deck. It's an impressive bit of kit for sure, though I'm hardly putting it through its paces by catching up on Mouthwashing and replaying 1000xResist for the nth time.
With , I'm wondering how Valve's handheld will fare playing something more demanding like Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth or Avowed. Well, Nvidia will be offering a big screen experience right there on your little screen later this year, as just announced at this year's CES, a native GeForce Now app is on its way to the Steam Deck (via ).
But it won't just be Valve's handheld gaming PC finally enjoying a native GeForce Now experience. [[link]] The cloud gaming service will also be coming to a slew of VR and mixed-reality headsets, including the Meta Quest 3 and 3S, , and "Apple Vision Pro spatial computers." Nvidia explains that subscribers who own these devices will be able to access GeForce Now by "opening the browser to play.geforcenow.com when the newest app update, version 2.0.70, starts rolling out later this month"—considerably sooner than Steam Deck players are set to get it.
Despite spending most of my days in the claustrophobic confines of wearing both glasses and headphones, I personally don't understand the appeal of mixed-reality headsets. However, those that do get it will be able to enjoy a "gaming theater" experience for gamepad-compatible releases. To be clear though, support for any virtual reality games has not been confirmed.
There are also a few more caveats when it comes to GeForce Now itself. For the uninformed, GeForce Now doesn't offer its own library of games to sample—it's only ever streaming titles you already own. Still, the service offers cloud-based support for more than 2000 games with this latest announcement adding upcoming titles and at launch to that roster.
Furthermore, if you've got deep enough pockets to splash out on the $20-a-month Ultimate membership (plus the internet [[link]] connection to match), This tier of membership also restricts you to 8-hour play sessions—which is perhaps slightly more understandable on the grounds of needing a 'touch grass' refresh alone.
Personally, I think I'll manage with the office Steam [[link]] Deck as is for now—next on my 'to play' list is , so I'm content to continue on my merry-not-that-demanding-way. But with an underpowered rig at home and plenty of colleagues that would quite like it if I gave the Steam Deck back one of these days, perhaps it wouldn't hurt to poke my head in on the ad-supported Free tier of GeForce Now—even if it is for only an hour per play session.