• @vanderbilt
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    91 day ago

    Nice, now I finally have an upgrade path. I’ve loved my Steam Deck, but have wanted something I can have a “docked mode” with high performance and a “mobile” mode with the TDP locked to save battery.

    • billwashere
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      919 hours ago

      So for you non portable gamers like me who didn’t know what TDP was and had to look it up…

      TDP, or Thermal Design Power, is a crucial concept for devices like the Steam Deck. It refers to the maximum amount of power that the device’s System on Chip (SoC) or APU (Accelerated Processing Unit) is allowed to consume. On the Steam Deck, TDP is measured in watts and directly impacts performance, battery life, heat generation, and fan noise. So limiting the amount of power it uses when not plugged in makes the battery last longer.

      • @[email protected]
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        16 hours ago

        It’s important to note that TDP is a very fuzzy number. It has no industry-wide standard definition, and manufacturers play with the formula for their own products all the time. At best, it gives you a ballpark estimate of what cooler and PSU you’re going to need, and some would dispute even that.

      • bruhduh
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        220 hours ago

        Yes, but can you add CPU and GPU cores on demand tho? If you have them you can set tdp limit on portable mode and remove limit in docked mode, but how about steam deck, how do i add GPU and CPU cores?

      • @vanderbilt
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        121 day ago

        You can, thanks to SteamOS. That’s why I am looking forward to this device. It’s got a much higher performance ceiling than the deck, so I can throttle it down and have the option of performance or battery life. The deck wasn’t a powerhouse to begin with, so unless I’m playing a 2D clicker I never throttle the TDP.