I Built A Steam Machine In 2023
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- čas přidán 18. 05. 2024
- Back in 2014, Valve started their push to make PC gaming more accessible with Steam Machines. Although they weren't successful, they continued their development of the idea, which ultimately lead to the Steam Deck. Although the Steam Deck is a great handheld device, you might run into issues with running modern AAA titles.
00:00 - Intro
01:22 - History of Steam Machines
03:34 - Setup & Components
07:04 - Building the Console
10:32 - Extra Features
13:16 - Benchmarks & Features
14:49 - Conclusion
Fortunately, thanks to ChimeraOS, you're now able to bring the Steam Deck experience to more powerful hardware. You can also modify it to add more console features like streaming apps, voice chat, and music streaming.
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For those that keep saying how ChimeraOS now has HDR and ray-tracing, I know. This video is nearly 3 months old (and I built this PC about 4 months ago), so there's been many updates to ChimeraOS since I post this. I'm glad to see how our homemade Steam Machines get even better!
Question: If you already had a perfectly functional PC at home, why wouldn't you just setup remoteplay? Like a 5 year old laptop can do that, and run 4k60 just fine.
@@BaneWilliams Even with a WiFi 6 router that's only a few feet away from the Steam Deck, I still suffer from massive input lag and pixelation. It's too much of a hassle to set up half the time, so I still think a proper machine is the best way to go
@@TomJeva Thanks for explaining! remoteplay definitely only works on ethernet, so I understand completely.
@@BaneWilliams Some people also react a lot more to the added latency than others. I tried to stream from my main desktop to another desktop a while back, both on a wired connection, people used to playing on standard TVs probably wouldn't even notice the added latency but it felt completely unplayable for me.
Have you tried the beta steam build on just windows 10 or 11? Big picture mode looks just like the steam deck.
I would love to see an official SteamOS release. I got the Deck because I 'thought it'd be neat', little did I know I'd be absolutely floored by it.
Im in the same boat . The main draw for me was the idea for they where going make sure games worked and for chance play games that never, where going be switch like civ beyond earth and deus ex hr.
pssst its arch linux
This. I dread booting up my gaming rig with Windows 10; it's such a clunky mess and impossible to get it to perform the way I want due to Microsoft's intrusive updates and kernel-affecting drivers. The SteamOS is -- bar none -- the best OS I have ever used in my life (eve better than Windows 3.11). I love it so much; just wish it had Nvidia support and then I would put on my gaming rig.
There's still a lot of issues they need to resolve for an official desktop OS (especially since the majority of gamers are still using Nvidia cards). I doubt we'd see one for at least a year or two.
@@420247paul except steamos is MORE than just arch OS.
Two important differences:
1. Vanilla Arch is a nightmare to install for anyone not familiar with linux (i.e. over 98% of gamers), even a nightmare for many people who ARE familiar with linux.
2. SteamOS comes with a lot of very specific and important things preloaded and preconfigured, most importantly Gamescope.
Enable 60W CPU mode in the bios and cap fps to 60. Runs very quiet
Great tip!
Capping fps to 60 is not a good idea though, scratch that last part.
we need a steam machine SO BAD.
every pc can now be a steam machine, there is no point
@@Glade4 Once SteamOS3 comes out, I'll agree tbh
@@Glade4 Listen, if they made like 3 models with with custom RDNA2/RDNA3 apu's like what's in the Deck but only more powerful, they'd dominate the market. Have a full hd model, a mid tier model, and a expensive 4k model that would whoop a XSX, PS5/PS5 Pro's ass. I don't see driver support being an issue with how popular these SoCs have gotten and just putting SteamOS on a custom built gaming computer doesn't appeal to the mass market by both cost and convenience than a console that's sold at a loss.
You know what I could see this happening, but it wouldn't be anytime soon they first need to release Index 2, then in 2025 Steam Deck 2 and only then should they do Steam OS Machines so like 2027 when PS6 and XBX2 comes out, it would make a lot of sense with a very stable OS by then.
Steamdeck
Are we really at a point when a 1500 dollar PC is considered mid range? That's pretty crazy
Do you have listening comprehension problem?
@@brosplit Do you? He literally said it was mid range. Yes, he also said he could have saved some money by getting older and used parts. But it's still a mid range PC. With how delicate PC parts can be, not everyone wants to build a PC with old used parts.
@@tubguinace duh, in sum the video stated: i know this is abit high for midrange gaming PC but I am happy with it.
@@brosplit mid range gaming PC's used to be a third of this price, that's more than just a bit
@@tubguinace yes, used to. Did you forget how GPU cost in the last 4 years?Nowadays, Budget gaming PC costs between 600-800$, Midrange costs about 850-1200$, high end can up to 5000$.
I remember my family got me and my siblings a steam machine for christmas which I think was from alien ware. The steam machine was definitely cool and the controller was one of the best PC controllers imo, wish valve still supported making steam machines alongside the steam deck. Great video!
Awesome build! I went with 5600x/6700xt combo with my Chimera OS build. It was my first time building a PC from scratch so I went with a mid size tower. It's amazing and my whole family is enjoying using it. One thing I added was a cheap USB wireless adapter for my Xbox controllers instead of relying on Bluetooth. Now my controllers can wake the PC on sleep. It compliments my steam deck perfectly.
It's cool that you can turn on your PC with the Xbox adapter, but it's a little glitchy for me. Whenever I turn the computer on with a controller, none of the buttons on the controller work. Have you found any way around this?
@@TomJeva dang sorry to hear that, it's been working flawless for me. Wish I could be more help.
That's awesome. What wireless adapter are you using? I'd love to have a setup similar to that.
Thanks.
What happened with the RAM is that ryzen can only handle DDR5 6000-6200 so 6400 is just too high. You could have applied the 6400 profile then set the speed to 6000 for best results.
memory overclocking isn't exactly a casual crowd topic, especially once you start talking about manually setting speeds and timings. Understandable since the gains to be had can be quite situational to non-existent depending on the platform
@@Phynellius a lot of pc manufacturers set the speeds around 3000-5000MHz so a lot of the time you’d have to download ryzen master for ryzen based systems to force a higher memory speed so say your memory is 6000MHz you’d then have to force your computer utilize the entire memory speed and not be capped although I only recommend that if you know wtf you’re doing cause if you don’t shit can go sideways and glitchy pretty quickly!
I recently built my first ITX steam machine, but with mostly used parts. It runs a Ryzen 2600 + 1060 6GB. Got away with moderately undervolting the GPU, now the system is super quiet and came out at about 400$. Sure, i'm limited to graphically more easy to run games, but it's a nice start for me and i didn't have any issues yet. :)
How do you run an nvidia card on chimeraos it says amd is required
@@luigi95- windows but with steam big picture mode probably
1:19 Man that was too real
Steam deck is my first gaming pc. I haven't looked back. I love being able to play playstation games, xbox games, indie games, 3rd party games and pc games all on one platform. I hope valve makes a better steam deck in the near future.
Steam is literally the only gaming company I can get behind. The steam controler looks was such a hybrid of a mouse and thumbstico and even years later its features are seen new in the market.
Steam machine as a concept sounds absolutely beautiful. Thousands of people using the same machine on similar settings. It also resolves the issue of generating shadercaches which can cause lag even in the beefiest cards right now. Also they may be cheaper than the sum of thier parts. Which cant be said for pre built pcs, the closest thing to the steam machine.
I wonder if Valve is even contemplating making an at home console? Having a hardware target for high end gaming might make SteamOS and Linux by extension more widespread.
I just built a SFFPC myself(i3-12100F and RX 6800 in a Velka 7), it's for shuffling around the house and occasionally to LAN parties.
They have a home console it's the steam deck and steam machines
@@Planet-Anime Steam Machines don't really exist in the modern day, and the Deck is more Switch-esque. I was envisioning something more akin to a Series X/PS5 as a hardware target, but really at that point , one would be asking Valve to make a standardized PC for gaming.
There really isn’t a point. Just connect you PC with a HDMI cable.
@@TNTITAN The point would be that it would be an easy way for someone to get into PC gaming without having to have the technological savoir of building a PC.
@@Sonic6293 I bet most just type “gaming pc” on Google and went what looks best + affordability.
This is a awesome sign that gamers (especially Japanese gamers) gotta start making/manufacturing their own pc gaming machine so that the small tech companies can beat the shit out of the big tech companies.
this is a sick build. 10/10 enjoyed!
This is such a cool project, I'd love to see an update video on how it's going / problems you've faced.
Great video!
Maybe some time in the future. There's been a ton of updates to Chimera that makes it a lot better. Many of the complaints I've had are already solved! Great job to the Chimera team!
But then again, it seems like CZcams thinks I'm a tech CZcamsr so I might as well.
Reason why people don't build steam machines is because game consoles don't typically cost $1500.
You choose the price of your Steam machine
You can build something significantly cheaper that could still compare with the current gen consoles. He just went for higher end parts, and gave himself limitations like the small form factor so he can't just buy any parts since they also have to fit.
Probably around $800 or less could do it, especially if you find good deals or even go for used parts. Yeah it's still more than console, they have the advantage of cheaper parts due to mass production and selling consoles at a loss. But it's made up for over time with no subscription fees and tons of steep game sales, and when you do finally upgrade you don't have to buy a whole new system.
(and like already mentioned, someone can choose to spend less or more, options are nice)
game consoles are all about hidden costs tho so it's reasonable that you'd end up paying that much over time for all the subscriptions needed to make your console useful
For me the games i already have on PC makes it cheaper for me
Then you go and buy couple of console games and the price evens out. Oh wait, what's that? If you want to play that game on PC you gotta buy it again? Good thing you can use one library across your steam machine, steam deck and your PC. :)
If they could make tiered RDNA2/3 based steam machines (like the deck), with some that can push frames to their index decently- it would be so awesome!
Great video! I did a similar project recently with a 5700G/Radeon VII. There are some drawbacks (mainly bluetooth controllers not working) but it was still fun to build and I'm really looking forward to the official SteamOS release!
Built one with R5 5600x and an RX6600xt. I use HoloISO instead of ChimeraOS. 2 months in and still works great! Bluetooth devices working well too!
Great video! Surprised your channel only has 500 subs. Looking forward to seeing where your channel goes!
I just recently bought a Beelink SER6 mini PC on sale for the price of a refurbished Steam Deck and loaded it with ChimeraOS. It's small enough to bolt onto the back of a monitor and fit all the power cords for both (plus speakers) into a cheap cable management box.
The goal is to make it a portable, multi-purpose setup for fighting game tournaments that's easy for any player to walk up and use. I'll be doing the first field test this week, but it's worked great in my at-home tests! I can go from packed to playing a game in a couple minutes and it only takes up one outlet, so it's friendly for other setups. I'd say between the PC, the monitor, and all accessories I've spent about $425 on this project
Wonder if you could do a deep dive into why Steam Machines failed and how the Steam Deck avoided those pitfalls.
1) because proton compatibility was in its infancy and not many windows games worked
2) the pricing structure of the hardware wasn’t fixed. So a few companies were selling the same exact hardware for different prices.
3) it was significantly more expensive than a console for not much more performance and a quarter of the games.
@@WeencieRantsSome of the prices were bloody wild; I recall some companies charging £1000+ for low end laptop parts in an admittedly nice looking chassis.
MAN, as another new channel, I saw this video and honestly thought “no way this guy has less than 100K subscribers with that production quality.” Subbed, this was fantastic!
Btw: hearing someone else say communication doesn’t come naturally to them yet is a nice refresher as it always felt like everyone else just got it right away, hence my first lackluster video 😅
I had a similar issue. I wanted to play my PC games with a controller from the comfort of my couch, not sat at my PC. I also had the issue that I work from home, so by the time I've done an eight-hour work day, I don't want to be in the office where my PC is. Thankfully, my living room TV has a Steam Link app and I can pair an Xbox Series controller directly to the TV. Games run surprisingly well over the local network and, while there probably is some lag / latency / delay, I certainly can't feel any.
Why doesn’t Steam release an official SteamOS? I don’t think they realise how many PC gamers like myself now want a console like experience but don’t want to leave their steam libraries. They could be a massive competitor to Xbox and PlayStation.
i also have the same case, using a 120mm aio cooler (you can use a cheaper atx psu if you want) at the front instead, you wont have to worry about low profile coolers, psu being so close and the cables blocking airflow.
I would love another shot at the steam controller. Basically the steam deck controls but just a controller.
Just saw this in my recommened. Great video and surprised with the low number of subscribers for such terrific and informative vidoes
Noctua sells a foam duct kit for some of their heat sinks. I used one for the Ryzen 7 3700X that I built this summer and it dropped my temps by about 10°.
It would be a nice dual boot option for my secondary gaming pc. Looking forward to trying it out.
Well in short i would just say great video!! Covered all aspects of from building a steam machine to the Industry's future.
You made an entire video about ChimeraOS without mentioning that you MUST have an AMD GPU, this is a really really important caveat!!!
This is the info I was looking for 😂
Super interesting subject, great job !
Subscriber no. 817 👍 keep up the work. Very high quality
My pc is a ryzen 5 5500 coupled with a rx6650xt, it never overheats and I can play any game easily.
When I saw this recommended, I really hoped it would be about building a literal steam-operated machine.
SteamOS could work on a home PC, but I feel Valve would need to release a fixed platform hardware like they did with the Steam Deck, but with more powerful hardware.
The big advantage of the Steam Deck is that the hardware isn't constantly changing, that allows Valve and developed to target a specific PC platforms, whiles at the same time, making it far easier for users when it comes to automating bios, drivers and OS updates, it's all taken care of its self.
The only major thing I think that is missing is set profiles for the games, if you have a fixed set hardware for a few years, it's much easier for Valve, the community or the developers of the game to have a preset for the game that automatically sets the resolution, frame rate, visuals settings, controls and so on, so it runs more like a console in that you don't need to do anything, unless you want to change some of the advanced settings.
This would make it far mire appealing for console gamers wanting to jump into PC gaming, and all it needs is what Valve is doing with the Steam Deck but for a home based PC console.
As for the presets, there are 3 ways that could be done, ideally, the developers of the game will do it, like some are already doing on the Steam Deck, but realistically, Valve or the community would be a better fit, at least until this concept really gains popularity that developers do it on their own, it would be a simple thing that as you instal a game from Steam, it replaces the default config file of the game with one that works better for the Steam Deck, or a home based PC console, and all it needs for that to happen is for stability and not constantly changing hardware so developers know what to target, so something like the Steam Deck, with 2 or 3 upgrade cycles through a normal console cycle, depending on how much hardware progress is being made.
Valve have the core foundations in place already apart from a preset for all the games, which would be a game changer in their favour and would make the Steam Deck or home based PC console as easy to use as a console.
As for what he did in the video, it kinda defeats the purpose of what Valve is aiming for, which is the low price, ease of use, whiles being open, so like a hybrid PC/console but the user doing have to constantly maintain the system with updates and other fixes along the way, basically, what Valve did with the Steam Deck but for the home market is what we need, with limited upgrade options so there's a platform around it that developers can change, that would still be far better than what consoles offer, it's a lot more open, a full-blown computer and far more games at lower prices, and as long as Valve release 2 or 3 of them per console cycle, that will cover most bases in keeping up with hardware changes.
Love your video work sir!
Remove the shield for the back of the motherboard. This actually gives a significant increase in airflow for that particular case.
I fantacise of a steam deck form factor with a dock containing an external gpu and an extra cooling solution for the cpu, really giving you the best of both world (for gaming, even the best of all worlds if you consider it as a pocket productivity laptop)
Maybe one day… Volvo ?
I think you can do that with some of the other handheld PCs out there that support Thunderbolt. If they add a Thunderbolt port in the next revision they'd be in business.
I mean... you can kinda already do that with a Deck
Excellent content, Well-scripted, well-paced, well-editing, No stupid music. No asking for subs, comment and likes. 15~18min long is long enough but not too long that makes me lose interest. Man, You got yourself a new subscriber. Great job
Have you looked into the Noctua NH-L12S, flip the power supply and I have seen people install a slim 92 mm fan near the right side exhausting?
Awesome! I use my PC like a games console (big picture and steam input) is awesome
What we need is steam os. Valve is working on it. They have said it’s coming out to desktop and other devices. We just don’t know when. Steam deck is proof it works. We just need Valve to work on it so it’s works with both AMD and Nvidia GTX + or newer.
While back. Like maybe 2 yrs ago. I tried haloISO. It was unofficial version of steam deck steam os. But it was buggy as hell for my GTX 1080ti. The start menu pop up for “shut down” often didn’t work at least in game mode. Booting to desktop worked flawlessly.
Valve is working on it. We just don’t know if/when it ever come to desktop PCs. That what I am waiting. I hate windows 10, but atm I am dual booting Win10/Win7 atm. Can’t stand o many things in windows 10, hate control panel, and using start menu for proper winxp/Win7 menu task art/start menu for Win10. Win11 is even worst.
I know there other Linux distros. But everyone ive tired been junk, or had issue or couldn’t even install steam. Tried ubuntu and few others. But was years ago. I also play a lot ATS, and never figure out how get force feed back work with my g29 wheel or get my SKRS shifter to work either on my TH8A shifter.
So I am waiting for official steam os. And or I hope the launch new steam box or steam console. Something that at least has same performance of ps5 or better and have at least 16 GB GDDR6 or better. That’s around 10 to 12+Tflops or better. Which should be more then enough for most pc games atm. If Valve made steam Box with zen 3 or zen 4 with RDNA3 or newer and proper dedicate GGDR6 or better. It will sell like crazy. As long steam os is stable. Thanks vulkan.api which is proof dx12/windows are bloatware.
Loved the video. Youre definitely getting a sub
May I ask how you fixed the Bluetooth controller connection issue? I've been really wanting to do an HTPC Steam OS system, but I'm really concerned about the controller issue?
I forgot to plug in the antenna into my motherboard. I didn't realize it was also for Bluetooth and not just for Wi-Fi. After hooking it up, I had no problems with my Dualsense controller. If you prefer Xbox controllers, I recommend getting the official wireless adapter, which makes it easier to hook up your controllers. You can even turn the computer on with it (though I've always had trouble with it).
I suspect the general usage SteamOS release will happen shortly after SteamOS 3.5 leaves beta. They've added features in it that are must haves for a gaming focused desktop PC OS (HDR and VRR specifically), so it makes sense that that's what they're waiting for (though decent nVidia drivers might also be the hold up).
Also: you can enable raytracing for games other than Doom Eternal with a launch option on Steam Deck, so I'd guess it might work on ChimeraOS as well.
The launch option: RADV_PERFTEST=rt VKD3D_CONFIG=dxr,dxr11 %command%
9:43 That's not the CPU baking in your PC. The 7000 series always goes up to 95C immediately. Also, to avoid RAM issues in the future, always get ones from your motherboards QVL to ensure compatibility.
I love that he comments early on about choosing the 7600X to avoid high temperatures without knowing that Zen 4 by design boosts to the thermal limit to sustain the highest possible clock speed. Also his comparison to the 5600 which has a 30W lower PPT and would thus put out less heat in every given scenario regardless of operating temp/boost state (albeit at lower performance). Overall just weird justifications for buying the new shiny chip.
5/10 , does not emit steam, doesnt even have a fog machine to create ‘steam’ either
You could just have gone into bios and set ram frequency to 5000 and everything would have been fine😅. You most likely threw away a perfectly good pair of ram sticks..😊
Edit:(If you do not want to set ram timings manually, just buy something on rhe qvl ram list for the mobo you have.)
They weren't good. Memtest86 was failing on every test. Fortunately I got a refund on them so it's all good.
always were
i love my little R1 alienware alpha from 2015. it can't play newer games worth shit obviously, but i still love it. absolutely fantastic to have a box in the living room or to take with me places instead of having to lug around my PC. just upgraded it too!
i wish, my was complete trash and would always overheat during gameplay
I'm happy how i saw TUNIC several times in this video, great game.
So serious question... if I buy a steamdeck, I can use remote play for games that happen to be a bit chunky, right?
Great video!
Didn’t even clock you only had 200 subs
Incredible vid dude
Didn't realize I had 200 subs until yesterday! Thanks everyone for the support!
Hey I am having issues with audio through hdmi on my tv, everything is crackly in the steam menu and ingame to a point where you can’t make out any sounds but in the desktop mode itself it’s fine. Wondering if anyone else is having the same issue?
I've noticed that a couple times, but it usually goes away after a few seconds. I haven't noticed it recently, though. Have you updated to the most recent version of Chimera? If you're still facing issues, I recommend heading to the ChimeraOS Discord channel and reporting it there.
Try a different HDMI cable. If you get the same results, try a different HDMI port on the video card. If that fails, try a different HDMI input on the TV.
Thumbs up for using scythe cooler! They make some amazing coolers that go sadly under the radar as they don't sponsor any big yt channels to promote them...
Woah how ur sub count so low, quality vid. Thank you for the newly learned information
Great work🎉🎉
If only Steam Machines had disks/carts you could keep forever.
Not really a fan of disks but i like cartridges.
Phenomenonal video mate
Best thing about steam deck is that every single steam deck out there has the same specification as any other steam deck(except for storage). This gives developers something to aim for. I home next steam machine will do the same.
rather than cutting those tabs off from the pcie brackets on the back of the pc. I normaly just bend them out with a flat head screw driver and they are less of a hassle. use it like a pry bar.
its funny that i got recommended this video after I've watched videos of a leak saying there is new steam console being in the works
You can do raytracing, I use it all the time. You usually need to add a launch option in steam though. Also I love ssf builds but they are never easy lol.
I love that PC gamers can have a serious expression on their faces while comparing a 500 DLLs 4k gaming console, against a 1,500 DLLs PC and that's without including mouse and keyboard
Then you got to count the price of a monitor for the PC which of the price for good one
It still amaze me that "console" that were supposed to be affordable now ask for 59$ (or more) annual online plan, 500-600$ console price + 60$ controller.I'm not even speaking about elite controller, "digital games" that cost the same as physical and all the random accessories.
Steam on PC is way more affordable and Steam Deck with EmuDeck unlock endless possibilities !
couldn't you use an AIO to increase the thermal performance of the CPU and double it as a case fan? even 120mm AIO's are enough to cool latest Ryzen 5s and below
I'm getting too old for tinkering...
I'm sure typing that message tuckered you out too, eh? Take a nap grandpa.
I use the big picture mode in windows. Works great.
This is amazing!
i play on linux (fedora 38 workstation) on my main pc
and raytracing is fully working with the same performance as in windows
but i only tested one game: Satisfactory
I know the steam controller pushed people away for being wierd, but it legitimately is one of the best controllers ever made. It was horrendously missunderstood at launch. I want a V2.
If they created a controller with the Steam Deck's layout, they'd have a winner on their hands.
@@TomJeva I could honestly go without the second stick still, but I agree.
For such a small channel, this is really high quality stuff! Thoroughly enjoyed this video, would love to build a steam machine if i had the scratch for an AMD card rn. Still on my trusty old 1660 ti.
Widevine 1 support is missing. So Streaming services will be limited to 1080P at the most.
Just took my core i5 12400 plex server that I built for $400 a year ago, and added a 3070 for $200 and 64GB of DDR 4 ram for $60 and now I have a living room computer that works pretty well for less than $800. Thank goodness for Microcenter. I love the Av1 support that my intel iGPU gives me.
Cool video!
I’ve still got the Alienware alpha hooked up to my tv to watch streams on tv. It still works awesome got it in 2014.
I thought the idea of a steam machine even as a PC user was weird because every time I build a new PC, the old PC goes into the living room.
I'll play games with a controller like usual, and it makes a great watching experience vs sitting in my office since it's plugged into the speakers.
"I want something that can play most games at 4K 60". That is far from modest.
A Steam Machine fine tuned like Steam Deck would be great! Chimera OS is incredible too but messing around with PC parts and hook ups is a pain in the ass
I’m trying out Chimera on an 11400/RX 480 on my living room TV. It runs amazingly well, and has fewer issues than I have on Linux proper (example: Borderlands GOTY Enhanced would lock to 24Hz at 1080p no matter what refresh rate I chose until dropping to 900p, not the case on Chimera). I am extremely impressed.
just run windows lol. why bother with all the unnecessary setup and compatibility headaches with Linux. make steam auto launch in big picture mode if you really care that much about exclusively using a controller
while I have an existing linux setup the fact that the 6700XT can run 4k60 is a very valuable piece of info.
Are you able to use wake on Bluetooth to turn your steam machine on with an Xbox controller?
You can. You can even do it with a keyboard & mouse, but it's kinda buggy. When I turn on the computer with an Xbox controller, it would connect, but I can't control anything. I would have to turn the controller off and then reconnect the controller to get it working again.
Steam Machines weren't just small PCs. They had various tricks like heat and air insulation layers to keep GPU and CPU heat separate and improve airflow.
Like to point out, ones chimera os will gets updated with some the new patches that will have ray tracing and hdr. Just nvidia user be left in the dark until Nvidia open there driver more.
Hey just a quick note, what you experienced is 100% the result of trying to run your RAM above the motherboard's rated speed. In the past motherboards didn't bother certifying higher speeds on the spec page, but higher speeds would often work, leading to this misconception still being around. These days every motherboard has a fairly accurate reporting of compatible memory specs
Gskill and Corsair (and all the other major consumer facing memory brands) all repackage the memory from the same 3 manufacturers--Samsung, SK-Hynix, and Micron. They all have nearly identical reliability, and memory issues that are the result of the actual dimms themselves are exceedingly rare when running in spec.
And one more thing: You can always run your ram at a different speed that is within spec! There are usually multiple slower profiles as options in the bios for this reason
Why no one using ChimeraOS mentions you can literally load roms and install flatpaks from any browser in the network (cellphones included)?
Hey what is the game he is playing at 14:11? was a childhood game but i cant remember the name of it.
Amplitude. It's one of Harmonix's first games.
The NVK update a couple of days ago makes Nvidia builds much more interesting. They plan full Vulcan 1.3 comparability in March next year. :)
4:49 hey i have that exact keyboard and mouse it came as a bundle on sale so i got it (its alright sometimes youl have issues currently after like a year or 2 of use the mouse's wheel stops working every now and them keyboard is in a alright shape had to apply some rubbing alcohol to it to fix my keys not working)
I just use steam link to stream games from my desktop to my old laptop. Works great.
It's amazing how nowadays even average users literally recommend Linux gaming to some extent lmaoo
The installer isn't up to date, but you can still update the OS through itself ofc
HDR is being worked on and a few games actually support Ray Tracing, remember that Linux gaming got so good in less than 3 years, give us time
So if I give up multiplayer i can use it and i would be fine?
I'm also a steam hoarder with about 3400 games. The best decision I ever made was to buy a 75ft fiber HDMI cable and run it from my office PC to living room TV. I use a program called Monitor Profile Switcher and some hotkeys to switch between my 2 setups. I have a wireless keyboard, mouse and headphones that have enough range to work in my living room. Now I don't need to worry about buying another 4090 and can play all games at 4k with at least 100fps and not worry about linux compatibility.
Ok, so what I do, is have my office and living room combined. My PC is in a corner and then a HDMI cable connects my Oled to my battlestation, Big Picture is set to pop up on my 2nd screen so I pick up my DS5, hit my PS button, and I get a snazzier start up than either of the consoles AND the power of a 4090... until it melts anyway.
My guy, check your QVL (qualified vendor list)
Hey man, watched your video and noticed the part where you meantioned high thermals. I have this case as well and an alternative low profile air cooler. What i did was flip the psu over so that the fan faced the cpu. Then i flipped the cpu fan so that it would push air into the psu, and the psu would act as a heat exhaust. I understand that its a lot of heat being pushed through the psu, but so far thermals have been significantly improved without having to tinker with the cpu bios settings.
one of your first subs bro dont forget us
I was so happy to see the steamdeck. I knew it was going to pave the way to a stream console that competes with Xbox and PlayStation.