Needs to be able to match performance with battery life

That’s per Steam Deck dev Pierre-Loup Griffais, who toldThe Vergethat the portable PC would likely remain fixed to its current spec for at least a couple more years. The given reason is to help developers work towards a consistent bar for performance on the machine, rather than making incremental upgrades that risk fragmenting what devs are coding for and confusing players.

“It’s important to us that the Deck offers a fixed performance target for developers, and that the message to customers is simple, where every Deck can play the same games,” Griffais explained.

As such, Griffais said that the Steam Deck would only look to overhaul its hardware “when there is a significant enough increase to be had”.

A big part of that consideration is also balancing the handheld’s battery life, with Valve unwilling to sacrifice longevity in favour of raw power - something that apparently can’t be reasonably achieved at the moment, but is being looked at constantly by the PC giant.

“We also don’t want more performance to come at a significant cost to power efficiency and battery life,” Griffais confirmed. “I don’t anticipate such a leap to be possible in the next couple of years, but we’re still closely monitoring innovations in architectures and fabrication processes to see where things are going there.”

As it stands, the current Steam Deck’s battery lasts anywhere from a handful of hours to less than 90 minutesdepending on what’s being played. With newer games like Starfieldalready pushing the machine past its capabilities, that may drop even further by the time a Steam Deck 2 arrives.

Valve might also choose to hurry along its plans to compete with other contenders for the portable PC throne, with the likes ofLenovoandAsustrying to muscle in on the space -with mixed results.