"Everything you need to know" Just run a fresh install and get rid of McAfee, not that difficult...? PITA no doubt, but your over here acting like it's a dealbreaker.
@@cnr_0778 Erm, Steam was trying to be a monopoly for years and it was invented as a very strict DRM when Half-Life 2 came out. So, no, Valve is not always pro-consumer. Their store is plagued by trash/shovelware but they refuse to do anything about it because anything that gets sold on there generates revenue for them. Just because they made Steamdeck repairable (it actually saves them soooo much money to do that) doesn't mean their primary concern is the customers. Apple is a long running hardware company who has manufacturing downpat. Valve barely can afford to have one product at low volumes (in comparison). They could not possibly force the user to their own parts and pieces etc. and they could not possibly keep up with all the demand of repairs or replacements if people had issues with their devices. So, it is a marketing win. It is ensuring the community is filling in the gaps. They are a bit better with software support of course, because that's what they are good at and they want this to be about the Steam ecosystem. Again, a win for themselves first and foremost.
@@zenithquasar9623 Companies can have varying degrees of pro-consumerism. You talk of apple like its the most pro consumer thing out there cause of all of its products but most of its products gets outdated after only a couple years plus those products are exceptionally more expensive do its its premium quality and expectations. Valve compared to apple doesn't have that many products and as for shovel ware that's every store front from steam to epic to even on consolse like playstation and switch.
It still amazes me that Windows games mostly run very well on Steam Deck despite running on Linux with compatibility layers. Software really is so important.
A long time ago now, like 15ish years ago, I had tried Linux out for gaming (using cedega to launch windows games, I don't know if that's still a thing)... I was amazed that not only did it run, but I was getting a higher FPS in Linux, emulating windows, than I was in even a debloated Windows install.
@@aaronjones4529yeah and it's only gotten exponentially better year by year in the last like 5 years or so. Still a long way to go though. For desktops it sucks because all your peripherals usually have software components to fully utilize that are windows exclusive. And features like gsync, dlss, ray tracing and such are still nonexistent or...sketchy at best. It is PERFECT for a tailor-made piece of hardware like the deck tho.
Still uses compatibility layers just smoother now and we have proton 👍 still not straight forward fucked if you run into an anti cheat that’s unsupported or devs are just being cunts (bungie with destiny 2)
THIS is why I dig Dave's reviews. He WILL point out the flaws. He's my top one and Jarrod's. They think about the consumer first and if it's worth our money or if we'll even like it. I did not know that the steam deck was made to last a few years. It's a good point on it and would love to hear from Asus or if they'll make the new Ally 2 more long lasting. Either way, now I got doubts. I might still buy it, especially cuz my vacation time is coming up and need one or a laptop. Either way, thanks Dave. You rock!
The situation is a bit more complex. TDP vs. TDP comparisons assume that every manufacturer used the standard voltage curve profiles that are made for the chip from AMD. Board manufacturers have the ability to increase the performance of a given TDP or range of TDPs by scaling the curve up. You would not be able to see this if you only looked at the listed TDP, and a lot of the available sensors would still appear to operate under the normal limits. However, you can effectively have a 2-3W boost hidden into your "TDP" at any given level. This kind of boost can inflate your scores by up to 100% at lower TDP levels. Finding out if a device did this is a lot more work than anyone would want to do, and if you do not have a lot of devices with the same chip from different manufacturers, you'd never be able to pick out the the ones that juiced their numbers. Ally represents real performance for this processor.
This ^. I feel like if you look at the total power draw at 9W the Ally will be the lowest. If he would've matched the total power draw of the whole device the Ally would've been even better. AMD/Asus have definitely improved it a lot that's for sure.
Sure but the average user doesn’t care if it TDP varies or not. It’s literally about what they get at face value. If they both say 3W TDP, that’s what they will compare with the experience accompanying that.
Better than compare TDP only, you can compare battery life (for similar battery sizes of course - like the ally and the deck) - on games running at similar performance - like horizon 5 high 60 fps. Dave did that and the steam deck came up WAY ahead. So with or without “fake” TDP and profile curves/boosts etc, the Steam deck does provide value on lower wattage usage…
The detail. He waited. Done each game battery drain test. That's alot of dedication. I love his videos because, his reviews always be on side of user perspective. Sweet, simple, short. Great review as usual. Thanks, I was waiting for yours to come.
Really appreciate the extra mile you go through to deliver us the experience the manufacturer intended, instead of just using it as it and calling it a day. 🙏🏻
Your honest approach is the sole reason why I've been a long time subscriber. Well done. I have the Steam Deck and I enjoy the hell out of it... The Ally seems to be a great machine, but I'm hooked on this Steam community... They're so damn helpful and knowledgeable. My deck is literally getting repaired as we speak, no questions asked. Left trigger was sticking on occasion... They're all over it. So easy.
I also had that issue and got a free repair, and later on almost to the 1 year mark, was sent a brand new unit due to random resetting. Valve customer service is second to none
@@donniedarko4497 Awesome to hear. I'm dialed in with it. I don't really get into the crazy mods etc, I'm more or less, download and play. The only addition I've used is the Vibrant and the plug in that shows how games actually play based on a Platinum, Gold, Silver etc.
@@rescuerammer5357 definitely Steam deck is a great experience out of the box without tinkering. Only thing I'd recommend is "Cryo Utilities" as it's super easy for anyone and gives about 20 percent performance boost for free. Also emulation, but I've found that a lot easier with EmuDeck. Tinkering can be addictive bother
The work that Valve has done behind the scenes to support the Steam Deck is really unparalleled compared to any gaming device I’ve seen. They have made it drastically better compared to a year ago. They even do stuff like release support for controllers and other external hardware that they don’t even manufacture. They’ve been killing it. I hope that ASUS does the same with the Ally, but it’s a lot to live up to. We will see!
Very unlikely to happen. Valve doesn’t make money on the Steam Deck, they make money from people buying games on the Steam Store. So they have a financial interest in supporting the Steam Deck for as long as possible. Asus only makes money from the initial purchase, so its in their best interest to release a new model as soon as possible and hope you will buy it.
@@feezee82 damn this is a great point. While I don't believe that they don't make ANY money on the steam deck (sure, I'm sure the profit margins may be a little tight but their is surely a profit margin nonetheless), you're right in that their bigger interest would be in ensuring that people continue to buy their games on the steam store which forces them to make sure that steam deck is always in tip top shape!
@@feezee82 Asus makes better and more powerful hardware for the right price, valve wont win competing with ASUS in hardware. Software is also looking sticky for valve because ASUS has connections with Microsoft.
@@undisturbed809 “Software is looking sticky for valve” Bud, as long as Valve keeps updating SteamOS like it does now, there is no way that’s gonna happen. Microsoft has been very bad with their software updates and unless they release their own handheld console, I do not believe they are gonna bother updating Windows for handheld devices.
One of the things I had forgotten about coming back to PC gaming was the amount of troubleshooting you need to do before you can play a game. It's not terrible, but having to do that on a hand held would be a deal breaker for me.
this is where the steam deck prevails, for gaming it just works, only issues arise if you play untested games, but if its rated playable or verified it just works, now let me reiterate, thats for gaming, using the steam deck for desktop work still has a ways to go
I've played "unsupported" games and about 25% of even those games just work. And not to mention, Valve has been killing it in terms of software updates. In fact, I'd say that right now, I would get the Steam Deck over the Ally UNLESS you ONLY play games with anti-cheat crap.
You make a good point, Dave. When life has so much going on, you just want things simple and quick. That’s the appeal of consoles, quick resume and so on. Turn on and a couple of clicks and you’re set. Like a Nintendo Switch. No to bloat, pop ups, multiple programs to get things done, etc.
It's nice that they're looking into allowing more control to the device. Impatient to see what disabling cores on this thing will do, plus the potential for undervolting if UXTU allows so in the future.
The Ally is almost a Steam Deck ad. It has really allowed me to notice all of the small but brilliant decisions Valve made with the Deck beyond just raw horsepower.
If the Ally had track pads, better D PAD and buttons that don't stick, I would definitely buy one and sell my deck. That is way more important to me than getting a few more FPS from a game and a better screen I have windows on my deck and can play everything I want.
Amazing product review and points of comparison against its competitors. Thank you for also breaking down some pros and cons of the design choices made by Valve vs Asus. Definitely allows for more informed buying decisions based on the use case of the consumer! Awesome job, Dave!
Not surprised at all, ASUS really hasn't been on the ball lately across the board....at least they are getting their collective shit together and are fixing this one. Thanks for reporting on it Dave, I see no one else doing this lately!
I mean valve did it worse with the software pf the deck, so to be honest i guess asus is doing it better than valve xd The first version of steam os 3.0 was crazy xd
@@Nsfwstar people forget so fast. ppl are comparing the ally to the already updated SD , the SD issues at launch too. but people forgot all about that LULZ
@@Nsfwstar Um, never said Valve was perfect, not even once. I've got a SD, and I've had it since launch. They fixed it up good, and hopefully so does ASUS on this one. I'm not a Windows guy so it's not in my wheelhouse so to speak, but I hope they succeed, it's a good handheld all told.
@@Tha_Lyons The bigger problem is that the ASUS story regarding motherboards came out right around reviews dropping. It's not just about the SD software, it's about ASUS as a company not being trustworthy, beyond this product.
Phawx just posted a video today about optimizing the clocks to maximize the battery and it sounds like there's a ton of potential to improve this via software.
This is nothing new as it was around when Ayaneo 2 was released. If the demands on the Cpu and Gpu vary a lot it will cause the frame rate to be more unstable.
Yea there will be all kinds of software like that and thats one big advantage windows has and i watched his video today seems like you can really improve the battery life in some games. Im really excited for the ally been counting down the days.
Spot on. Most of the reviewer complaints I saw could be resolved by software/firmware updates. The big selling point for me is the multi-platform capability and the ability to install other apps. For simplicity/average user, Steam Deck might be preferable. I, for one, plan to strip the Ally of any bloatware as soon as I get it and tweak it to my liking, install emulators, etc. For that purpose, along with being able to step outside of the Steam ecosphere, I think the Ally is preferable.
I think this was the first review which really discussed the support philosophy from Asus and the user experience. I know from experience that Asus is pushing the product to life-support when a new product is for sale - I had some smartphones with exactly this issue in my past. More critically I see the user experience for now - Microsoft Windows is not made for such a device (at least for now) and their own solution is just a band-aid to get the system up running. That it is expected from the customer to do the configuration and optimization kills this device for many customers. Even thoug I have the experience I do no longer have the patience for doing this - in that regard Valve has simply the better solution. If you want just mobile gaming without in-depth tinkering then you should get a Switch or a SteamDeck - if you want the power and flexibility and do not fear tinkering then the ROG Ally is a good choice.
Ironically, people said the same thing when the Deck came out ("If you are okay with tinkering, you can get deck") That speaks volumes to Valve's efforts in improving Steamdeck and also standardising it. Because unlike the Steam Machines, which were basically too much and too many, Steam Deck will prolly not have such a fast cycle (maybe 3 years?) meaning devs can actually target it, and test and optimise around it.
A big difference is that the steamdeck is part of an ecosystem, and Valve continues to get returns from investing into the Steamdeck. For Asus, I expect they make large % of their profits on initial purchase (I don't know if they have their own Store in Armory care), so perhaps not a big incentive to keep investing it's improvement over time, like Dave said, they would probably prefer to sell you Ally2 in 2 years, which is a shame. I'm considering getting an Ally anyway to use as portable gaming/laptop.
I have an ASUS ROG Phone 5, and I think they only put out one or two updates during the entire life of the device. I took it to a phone repair shop a few months ago, and the tech there laughed when he saw the most recent update was January of 2022.
If I remember correctly most of the Steam deck reviews were the same when it was initially launched. That it's a product that "needs improvement". But Valve actually committed to it and supported the device and now we have an awesome version of the device. I hope Asus does the same here but like Dave said they are a hardware company. But here's to hoping.
for me the main problem of Ally is that it didnt really fix any of the problems people have with Deck .... on the contrary it made them even worse ... thx to being overly focused on "onpaprer" highest specs possible
@@kampru6867 BS they already fixed some issues like for example things in armory crate. And there will be further improvments. The Steam Deck also had its flaws when it came out.
ASUS software support just plain sucks. Just look at their Armory Crate, or even their RGB software...utter garbage. Love their hardware, loathe their software.
Valve being a software store means that they have an incentive to support the deck for a LONG time. They aren't being pro-consumer. It is actually in their business interest to have long hardware life cycles (less r&d money) and to keep old hardware running, so that owners keep buying products (games) with practically no marginal cost of sale.
Yeah, no company is your friend. But steam is probably the closest "pro consumer" corporation we have today. Their hardware and software support is unmatched. The repairability on the steam deck, as well as keeping the software open is so rare these days.
Mac user over here… was between getting a Steam Deck or a ROG Ally, went for the Ally in the end. Using it as a standalone handheld and windows old and recent enough games, got tired of all the Parallels and CrossOver tinkering, it works don’t get me wrong, but just want the plug-n-play’est experience. To my surprise, just swapping an Apple Studio display to the ROG Ally works 100%, even the camera, mic, speakers and connected keyboard/mouse peripherals to the screen. That said, man, since I bought it, it was like 3hrs of just tinkering around to get all the apps updates, windows updates, BIOS updates, good god… makes one appreciate the 15mins open and use experience of getting a MacBook or similar (minus Apple being Apple tends to slash legacy software too unhinged). That said, it’s an amazing handheld still today, crazy prices too during these holidays, got a -$200 for “Boxing Day Sales” and an extra -$100 open box, at a Best Buy.
Exactly. Thanks Dave. I was going to buy a 7840U handheld because I felt the benchmarks was so much better. However Asus is a large experienced manufacturer and uses 2 fans. An looks really nice.
Definitely nailed it on the support. Or lack of it. We’re upon launch and local resellers don’t have cases, the charger with HDMI port, etc. I’ll have to test it well when it comes because if I consider those pop ups a pain, I’ll just return it.
Had the steam deck for the past 6 months and absolutely love it. Still trying to stay on top of what’s happening with this product too but I won’t be sure until it falls into the hands of the public and the real problems are uncovered
Even then, my biggest concern is the point he raised with longevity, issue with big hardware manufacturers is if they're under a certain price, have the products don't work and then they'll last for a year or 2 max, fact of the matter is if I go to best buy and they tell me I would get geek squad protection on it, I'm simply not gonna get it
I don’t know if you’ve heard this enough but great video. Straight to the point. You touched on topics and stayed focused on them and did not go on a tangent and explained clearly. I got what I came for on the video and the 9 minutes flew by so fast. This was good. Thank you.
Dave is hitting all the right points. Even though it drains battery faster due to high Watts it charges a lot faster too. When I play BOTW on the steam deck I get 2 hours of batter but it takes longer than that to charge. My GPD Win 4 runs it at faster drain but I can recharge the battery in much less time and get back to being portable.
@@Ifalvarado BotW can run somewhere between 40-55 fps (you could try tweaking the Graphic packs some more to get it higher). Also, the game can become more demanding during combat so it's safer to run the display at a lower fps.
Great review! The problem is that they currently don’t have a way to financially keep the support for this device like you want. Can’t truly compare that aspect to valve. I see it being a new device every year or two which they specialize in unfortunately
Absolutely, and it is important to keep this in mind. But the advantage of running native windows is that ASUS do not necessarily need to do anything for games to run because AMD did a driver update that lets it run for PC, or Microsoft did a DirectX update or whatever. Not because *they HAVE* to update it because *it doesn't work if they don't* So it's give and take. The big concern to me would be stuff like stick replacements and general aftermarket support, but then again - if you manage to find the part numbers then Aliexpress will probably be able to provide.
Hey Dave, long time viewer here! Recently purchased a steam deck and I was suffering from buyers remorse with the deck when I saw people raving about the ROG Ally. You're really helped me realise how nice the deck is and how long the shelf life is, and that for me as an emulation geek the deck is probably a better idea when it comes to battery life. I got dual boot working for windows with CoD. Thank you, have a great day!
Huge communities supporting a product they love. This warms my heart feels like back when older games had huge mod followings like StarCraft broodwar. Quake 3 arena mods. Etc. When so many people put in effort to make something they love better. It just becomes an awesome experience for everyone involved. And your interested in the game for many many years to come. Steams huge community is what makes me come back to buy their games so I can play with all their stuff and support that communities provide. 10/10 steam keeps gaming alive.
My theory for the 9W performance is because it has 8 cpu cores, those 4 extra cores' impact are significant in a very limited power scenario. Now if they disable those 4 extra cores on 9W that would be nice
And they have to disable those cores physically. It's known issue of Ryzen processors being underpowered on low wattage especially when battery is removed
From my testing of various games on a Steam Deck vs 6800U handheld, the CPU is not the issue, the GPU is. It rarely goes lower than 10W on the 6800U, meanwhile the Steam Deck GPU goes as low as 1W on some titles.
@@seeibe would be nice if you could do the test on the 7840U, because the 6800U has different GPU with a different architecture, so that conclusion can't be final
Every reviewer? Idk man I'm all about praise but saying ALL the reviews for the ALLY were bad it just a bit dumb. The Phawx for example is continuously providing insights into the Rog ally and constantly reiterates that there's like going to be differences closer to releases etc etc. Not all reviewers "don't bother" to maintain accuracy...
Looks like you should check out The Phawx then. Dave didn’t even touch ground with VRR, which is the main reason for that 120Hz panel. Something creators like Dave always forget.
My wishes as a Flow X13-XGM owner for the next Ally version: - Larger Screen easily 10"+ - Strong kickstand - Trackpad - Removable controllers - More buttons - Another USB port - Maxed out SSD option - Camera front+back - Detachable Keyboard Cover
@@Leynad778 Exactly. This is a gaming console first. Office being pre installed and for sure as usual with Windows, booting office 365, onedrive etc up by itself in the background all the time it's not only a waste of disk space, it's a waste of RAM, CPU and battery life for most of us. Windows in a handheld like this still feels like a nightmare. Don't forget the horrible modern windows standby problems.
They could easily keep the support up if they dedicate a team for the original ROG Ally, they have the money to afford it, and there are still millions of programmers out of work, so there would be no excuse. That being said, with ASUS being a hardware-based company, selling some of the best high-tech computers I've seen, they could easily make the ROG Ally upgradeable, and modular. Making it last FAR longer than any handheld on the market.
I don’t think they’re going to suddenly revise the entire system just to make it modular. Only thing that isn’t soldered is the ssd and an entire motherboard would be expensive. Plus, selling new, difficult to replace motherboards would be extremely difficult and not a good business move. Asus is a company, not a group of hobbyists.
They will just make Ally 2 in 6 months. Don't dream too loud. My G14 stopped having driver/bios updates and improvements after half a year, and a bit more after the new one came out and now mine is completely abandoned. It's the maxed out 2500€ G14. Zero support. All the software support is now exclusively windows/linux updates and AMD/Nvidia drivers and that's it. Zero Asus involvements.
@@azenyr what update do you want beside windows, and gpu driver? Are you really like bloated software getting update?? I had asus 10 years ago and newly asus lately. They had been decreasing bloatware to the max and build it as clean as possible. in the past they had software like splendid, wavemaxxx audio, touchpad driver, instant on, even powerdirector😂
I bet the printer spooler is enable as well. Main issue with the ally is windows. Having been running modded/stripped down version of windows for year, you can get 10-15% more FPS if you take out all of windows bloatware. Windows needs a one click gaming button that pauses all unneeded windows stuff. I bet the ally gets more fps and batter life with tiny11 or ghost spectre w11…
As always, Dave's heart is in the right place and is so big Asus might finally listen to him and us. If Asus announces a new ROG Ally in the near future, I fear this device will have better lifespan from using SteamOS bases firmware.
I just bought my Steam Deck after watching all of those Ally reviews. The Ally can be powerful, but it is still not working as a console. You can not snooze it with a push of a button. You can do that with the Steam Deck and that is a must-have for this portable form factor in my opinion.
I’ve just bought a Deck too…. Today! I’ve spent hours, maybe days on end researching and comparing both devices. I even have the Ally on order too, but I’ll cancel that. It ultimately came down to the software and hardware synergy on the Deck. I don’t want to use Windows and I don’t even want GamePass… I hate subscription models and don’t want to support them. I’m quite new to Steam but I love what I see and I want more of that. The Deck hardware is so much nicer. The Ally looks like a cringy cheap gaming PC. Plastic rubbish. I also want to try trackpads. I love RTS games.
@@oo--7714 That's bullshit :p I've been using my SD for over a year now and it has reset my SD like 3 times in the thousands of times I've put it in sleep mode :p
Well you're right on the support stuff, Asus has a bad reputation there, it launches new cool stuff and then next gen is out of frame, like remember the external Gpu's stuff? the Mothership laptops which were supposed to be upgradable and then died, there's been several Asus stuff that never grew old and had a lack of support.
I remember that the deck had the same problems at launch with software issues and minor problems, If asus can keep up with fixing the software this device could probably be one of the best handhelds out there and the fact that they are already rolling out pretty good updates before launch is a good sign that they do intend to update the ally for a long time. I think people are going a little too hard on asus, especially when the deck had the same problems at launch, as a deck user (and rog ally preorderer) I really want this to succeed because it will bring more pressure and competition to the handheld market.
Asus probably won't support the Ally that long. Like you said, in 2 years people are gonna get the Ally 2. This is essentially a gaming laptop in the form of a handheld and Asus pumps out laptops left and right. That's why I went for the Steam Deck.
@@MattWiles don't hesitate and upgrade your steam deck from 512 gb to 2Tb, I'm not even particularly smart or technical person in terms of electronics and i managed to upgrade it. Months ago 2230 2Tb's cost like 400 - 500, now it's half than that. You can probably wait it out if you want it... So it lowers even more.
Not only that, I just feel like Windows is not the best option when it comes to PC handhelds. Although, ChimeraOS is a thing for Ally users to utilise soon for those who loved SteamOS as much as I do.
dnt buy asus they been pumping out sponsorships to try to hide the fact of their bios problem that fried every 7000x3d models while blaming the user and not replacing a single thing!
I've had the steam deck for a long time, but I am getting the ROG Ally. I'm okay with tinkering a bit. I've been doing that with my own computer forever. I will of course be removing that extra software for sure. The main thing is there just simply are lots of games I like to play that don't work on the steam deck. Niche japanese games seem to have the hardest time just running, and its been a big pain point for me. So after being away from my computer a week and only having the steam deck I figured I did need something that just ran windows and that happened to be the weekend the preorder for these started.
I own a steam deck since launch, and have been watching the inspired competition, here’s why no one has beaten the deck: Inputs & price. The entire experience of playing, buying and setting up games on the deck is really slick. The reviewers show some of the AAA popular titles, but we all have that game that is 15 years old, you used to play with a keyboard and mouse, and now you’re curious whether you can play it again, but like a boss while taking a leak. With the deck you can. For me, this game is Splinter Cell Chaos Theory, its amazing. It runs amazing on deck too. But its sooo much more fun with the Gyro Aiming, keyboard mapping and layering and trigger shortcuts. You can make splinter cell play like assassins creed odyssey, by automatically lowering/equipping the gun at half trigger, scope on full squeeze, switch ammo types with the back buttons, etc etc. All the inputs, especially starting at 400 eu, its amazing. Stick in a 1 tb sd card and you’re golden. Unfortunately, the reviews from IGN and other of the steam deck were made when it just launched, and they were ironing out the kinks. So it only got a 7/10. But with how its working right now, I bet that would have been 9/10. These competitors are coming close, but only offer windows machines to play Halo or other shooters, on my deck I can play Civ, age of empires, cities skylines, and Among Us, because of all the input mapping and track pads. So, really the question is has any device beaten the Deck yet? And these FPS and wattages numbers really don’t tell the whole story. Especially when you figure in the price….
I don’t know what TH-cam algorithm led me to this in my home feed, but thanks for this. What a great, honest take / update on the ROG Ally. Subscribed 👍🏻
4:90 - You can also limit the charging % on the Steam Deck, even limit the charging speed (so it won't heat up so much while gaming). With community tools and extras you can do almost anything with the steam deck. ROG can't seem to do anything that the steam deck can't, outside of the extra performance.
That's not true. The Ally has a native landscape display unlike the steam deck which is native portrait which means a bunch of older games don't instantly crash when launched. Phawx explained and demonstrated this in one of his reviews. Also a 120 hz display means that when you target 40 fps you won't get screen flickering that a 60 hz display would experience which means you can frame limit your games for a better looking performance while having very similar battery life to frame limiting at 30 fps. Lastly even if we can potentially install Armory SE on a steam deck I doubt Asus will support the track pads like Valve does within SteamOS. Time will tell how that plays out.
I see no reason to run above like, 90fps Max on a portable device. 60 is fine with sync, and all resolution problems can be solved in software, and quickly, too.
Good review. The Steam Deck suffered from the same thing though, early release with barely finished software. It's almost a completely different machine now than from 12 months ago. I agree it needs to feel more like a console than a PC. The best feature by far is launching a game and being straight into the action, or even better unpausing from 3 days ago and picking up right where you left off. Microsoft needs to do a lot of work in Windows to get that level of refinement.
I have to disagree with this take. The Steam Deck experience today is practically identical to how it was in April of 2022 when I got my Steam Deck. Is it different? Yes, but that comes down to developer support of the steam deck. The actual interface and functionality is very similar. We’ve got new tools to control performance and battery life, sure. We have community tools to enable plugins and better desktop mode support, yes. But the fundamental paradigm of downloading and running games on the go is practically identical. The flow of the software is very similar. I don’t think that can appreciably change for the Ally as long as it uses Windows.
I really hope that since they're partnering with Best Buy, it means some stores might get demo units bc, while it's large, I just love the controls of the Steam Deck, and I would really want to get this in my hands to know how it compares. It does look cool, just different to a Steam Deck and some good/bad things respectively. I appreciate this more balanced review.
I am extremely thankful for this video. It made things clear for me. Awesome delivery, great information, helpful visuals and great content. Thank You sir! God Bless You 🙏🏾
The SF6 example is interesting considering the number of people jumping ship to the Ally because they're tired of 'jumping through hoops' to get games working on the Steam Deck. They're gonna be pretty disappointed when they realise they have more/different tweaking to do just to get games to run. The performance looks great though.
The main issue with this form factor that many people worry about is analog stick draft. Unless these are using hall sensors, they should at least have detachable controls like the Switch so you can just either replace the controllers or just send the controllers in for repairs.
I have replaced the the right joystick on my steam deck. It's so easy and the community support is incredible. I think Asus would be wise to open up right to repair options like valve has. Xbox and Nintendo essentially make e-waste components, yes you can change them on their controllers but they are designed in a way you may break them in the process.
I think the last issue wouldn't be a huge a problem for me if ASUS would allow trading in older ROG Ally's for a discounted newer version in the future. I'm really hoping that ASUS could polish its system better in the future because the Ally has my vote when it comes to hand-held gaming devices in the market.
OMG thank you so much for this! People keep comparing a "Prototype" to a 1 year released device. I had the SD and it was amazing. But the ROG Ally is going to push the AAA titles and low end gaming too like emulation. I am excited to see what the Ally looks like in a year. The SD got better after the year and I see the Ally doing the same thing.
I agree with the premise of this video. Though I've had some software glitches with my Ally, I haven't encountered any of the issues early reviewers had with stuck buttons.
Well said Dave! Especially the MS Office, seriously, they expect kids to bring this to school when they forget their laptops and the Ally save your day scenario 😂. But there needs to be justifications for ASUS to support Ally for long term which I suspect is for their ROG Armory Crate to receive valiant supports and increased user base, so they can comfortably support Ally in the long run. 🤞
@@chikensaregood9500 hmm.. I guess this is a societal impact. The kids around my area are always using the latest gadgets, even for primary school kids (elementary schools for other countries), they carry iPhone 11-13 easily. But if you ask me, yes the Nintendo switch is much easier to use as opposed to a handheld Windows console.
With Steam Deck, the support and platform is the product. And it’s more so a product for the developers, which is why you see the new AAA games coming with Steam Deck support almost built in. A open pc console with an infinite, reasonable game store. Ally has none of that, which is why it might not fail now, but if will fail its customers in the long run. To this day you can pick up an original Game Boy and play and have a good time. That’s the Deck.
The whole card failure point is also a major reason why I'm not trusting the ROG for awhile. ASUS Rog has been pitched by many as "great cause they have Xbox Gamepass". As much as that can give you access to AAA games, it also is fairly limited once you go outside of that ecosystem. SteamOS works best with Steam, which while may not be as perfectly current as third party launchers, still has the bulk majority of games you could want. I feel like for games like Halo, Call of Duty, you get the better specs, esp if through Xbox's own gamepass system. But if you want to have optimization for lower powered games or anything through Steam, good luck, since SteamOS does the best at power management across games so you don't have 2 hours of gameplay with older games.
The Ally is already getting support before it’s official release. Considering that, it’s impressive and I’m sure Asus will continue to support the handheld. If the reviews have any use, it’s to show how much Asus is listening to feedback. Steam deck was no angel day one, that system was giving me tons of issues, it’s a process but hopefully enough Asus continues to listen to feedback to help this handheld grow like the Steam Deck has.
We need to wait until Asus fully updates Armory Crate. When they add the ability to disable cores, I think that is where we will see the biggest gains in low wattage performance. Going from 8 to 4 cores should (in theory) boost performance of the remaining 4 cores while maintaining the same low 9w. If that theory holds true, then the RDNA 3 and Zen 4 APU should out perform the Deck's RDNA 2 and Zen 2 APU purely from efficiency. Again, no way to confirm this until Asus releases that feature.
ปีที่แล้ว +8
I think its important to consider the user experience of the Steam Deck like you mentioned. Is the Ally more powerful? Yes but at what cost? Windows isn't too bad to navigate on a desktop or laptop but this is a handheld. Another really key thing that the Steam Deck does really well are pre-compiled shader packages. Steam Deck is basically the only PC device where you don't have to worry about shader compilation. There are just too many advantages in my mind, despite the terrible screen. I'd go Steam Deck all day.
Just a tidbit; @ 4:55, the feature is (what I believe) a staple for all ASUS laptops. I have a ROG Z13, and it has the same app with that feature as well - and it is definitely appreciated knowing my battery has a longer lifespan.
Its an all in one, portable gaming, desktop gaming with xg mobile and home pc when docked to a monitor. That's a big thing missed from the review, idea is that it can replace many things you have, laptop, desktop and tablet and perform better than those. With a portable monitor, wireless keyboard n mouse Yr ready to go content creating. Yes change the internal specs every year or so, it's what laptops manufacture do (and mobile phones). Just keep the layout the same. Makes sense to get your moneys worth and improve on performance on the same games. Gaming mobile phones always change the spec every year for performance gains. If they don't change people will just buy laptop or other handheld gaming brands as shown on your review. This will kill off the steam deck and version 2 will just be laughing at it. Low wattage performance on steam deck isn't that much better. Plus most game you can't play or just really bad quality due to not being powerful enough. The ally has flexibility, and expansion from the XG mobile. Ticks alot of boxes but would have been good to have ocilink or tb 4 support due to the price of the XG mobile. I remember the steam deck being so glitchy when it came out and only supported a hand full of games. People where modding this to install windows and use as an all in one but it isn't a good experience. The ally is just something what comsumer want and will more developement it will be a killer
I get what you mean, Dave. As someone in engineering, it surprises most people when I use "basic" machines like an iPhone. For most other things? Absolutely I want an Android so I can spec/modify it. But I bought my phone for the fact that it "just works" and it saves me time. It allows me to leave my engineering work separate from family time and such. I'm sure I'm not explaining it well, but that's kinda my take.
I have had this exact same situation but with video production on MAC vs PC. I loved my PC. Built a computer and everything. But I still switched to Mac because it just felt so intuitive to use and also because all of my devices and apps synced so well out of the box. As a business owner that time saved is priceless.
Your rationality doesn't make sense. You want a phone that "just works" so that's why you bought an iPhone? So what you're implying is that NO android phone in the market "just works". You don't have to justify your purchase by subtly putting down every other product just to try and flex that you bought an iPhone. My Pixel, Galaxy, Xiaomi, Red Magic, etc ALL "just works". They all do the "phone" stuff just fine. A $300 phone does the "phone" stuff just fine. All of the phones that I mentioned do things that an iPhone would only dream of, but because an iPhone can't do them or have those features, they often get called gimmicks, that is until Apple adopts it and THEN it becomes a must have.
@@Gabilleta Considering he’s getting actual likes instead of liking his own comment like you are, I’d say it was a pretty good comeback/point lol. Anyway, I’m familiar with Android devices. That’s actually why I said I specifically like them when I want to get to my engineering side. But when I’m at home with my family, I just want a simple device that works and isn’t over complicated. One that won’t give me “Application has stopped responding” or “SystemUI has stopped responding” (the latter coming from a surface duo 2). An iPhone or even a simpler device like even a regular old flip phone are just a lot better because they don’t have so many complications. It just makes it so you don’t have to tinker with so many things. Even iOS is getting that way these days and the setup is getting super complicated (see Stage Manager on iPads) which is unfortunate. Like Dave said, it’s not something you can really explain. It’s just something you get as you get older. You just want something straightforward outside of work (especially engineering) to have fun with your family. Doesn’t mean you hate the more advanced stuff. You just want something abstracted to as simple as possible.
Update**** currently this thing is amazing and blows the steam deck out in my subjective opinion... obv objectively, it's faster for newer games. But tbh can't go wrong with any of these things now a days
Holy shit, the control setting are very barebone, it doesnt even have gyroscope, per game profile, advanced deadzones, etc. Steam deck customization is just mind blowing. It's even work for non-steam games
I love this thing, it’s a great hand held, it also works well as a mini computer, turbo mode is insane when it’s plugged in. I like to play Darkest Dungeon 2 at 4K and steam deck really struggles (you can tell by how slow the coach moves), while is plays and looks fantastic. Had it running Spider-Man at very high in 4K. So yeah definitely for retro games, steam deck is probably better. Windows is annoying on a handheld, but once you in a game it’s amazing.
I'm sure Valve will release software updates to make SteamOS better, but the performance of Steam Deck won't change. Both of these products will have Gen 2 versions within 2 years so just decide which one you can live with more easily today.
Yeah it was crazy after I saw the reviews I cancelled my preorder. The reason ? After seeing the reviews it wasn’t much better than my SD. But NOW I placed my preorder again for the Ally 😂. Roller coaster of a week !
The dedication Valve has shown not just with hardware, component accessibility, or even software… but even supporting devs in getting their games running on Deck (look at TLOU for example), gives me immense faith in the longevity of the Deck. ASUS on the other hand I have zero faith with.
My main quirk with the steam deck is many games aren't supported and you have to go through loops to get them running anyway. With ROG Ally it's windows and way easier for me to move what's already on my pc on there and have the same experience being able to run any programs&games I want
It's not as easy as he makes it sound. You still have to wtweak most of the games you want to play. Just the other dasy, I had to switch the default profile on a game I was playing to proton experiamental (after trying several proton builds) and then I had to drop back into SteamOS to specify a community controller profile because the default one simply didn't work with that game. If it's an older game or not "Steam Verified"... which is still about 30% of the ones I try) you will have to fiddle and tweak to get them to work and a lot of times, they stil don't work no matter what you do.
Odd I still get support for my old ass motherboards and laptops I have. Hell, even my ROG2 phone still has support even though I don't use it. Not sure what he means by support...
ROG Ally is the beast and best better build berrer hardware like speakers better cooling and is cheap and can be buy at any time for same price than aya neo 2s
These updates are poised to elevate the device far beyond the competition, rendering other handhelds comparatively inadequate. The level of excitement surrounding this product is palpable, and I am eagerly looking forward to experiencing firsthand the remarkable features and performance offered by this cutting-edge device.
I'm glad I got mine from Best Buy, since I can just return it. I thought SteamOS had jank, but I never thought I would fall out of love with this thing in just one day. From the first hour (after updating everything) of tweaking my Ally and the 10 solid hours that followed, I could not get a single feature working correctly or consistently.
Dave2D is really nailing that "mad scientist isolated in his lab" look.
I'm starting to think that it's the "troubled dad" look lol
I’m waiting for the Kleenex boxes on the feet
i'm jealous of his flow!
giving me Rick vibes.
His hairline is getting bald lol that's why he doing long hair now 😊😅😅
The fact that Asus included Office and McAfee in this product tells everything you need to know right there. Good job calling them out Dave.
I mean, Office I can understand because of the Microsoft partnership, but McAfee!? No, no, no.
its great that its more than just a gaming device - so handy on my business trips and holidays I can now just take 1 device
"Everything you need to know" Just run a fresh install and get rid of McAfee, not that difficult...? PITA no doubt, but your over here acting like it's a dealbreaker.
@@Futura2500 No one is sincerely using Microsoft Office products with this device without some extra peripherals. Be serious
@@WeaponsArtist and then people make fun of Linux while saying stuff like this... Steam Deck works out of the box.
The thing about the steam deck is that the software just works and valve has constantly kept updating things. That support is unmatched
just like apple
@@franciscojunior3574 except that Valve isn't anti consumer and supports open source.
@@cnr_0778 Erm, Steam was trying to be a monopoly for years and it was invented as a very strict DRM when Half-Life 2 came out. So, no, Valve is not always pro-consumer. Their store is plagued by trash/shovelware but they refuse to do anything about it because anything that gets sold on there generates revenue for them. Just because they made Steamdeck repairable (it actually saves them soooo much money to do that) doesn't mean their primary concern is the customers. Apple is a long running hardware company who has manufacturing downpat. Valve barely can afford to have one product at low volumes (in comparison). They could not possibly force the user to their own parts and pieces etc. and they could not possibly keep up with all the demand of repairs or replacements if people had issues with their devices. So, it is a marketing win. It is ensuring the community is filling in the gaps. They are a bit better with software support of course, because that's what they are good at and they want this to be about the Steam ecosystem. Again, a win for themselves first and foremost.
As long as you don't play heavily anti cheat enabled games or use Xbox PC game pass
@@zenithquasar9623 Companies can have varying degrees of pro-consumerism.
You talk of apple like its the most pro consumer thing out there cause of all of its products but most of its products gets outdated after only a couple years plus those products are exceptionally more expensive do its its premium quality and expectations.
Valve compared to apple doesn't have that many products and as for shovel ware that's every store front from steam to epic to even on consolse like playstation and switch.
It still amazes me that Windows games mostly run very well on Steam Deck despite running on Linux with compatibility layers. Software really is so important.
@@lumeronswift I am using mint Linux on my 10 years old laptop with 2GB RAM. Works like magic
A long time ago now, like 15ish years ago, I had tried Linux out for gaming (using cedega to launch windows games, I don't know if that's still a thing)... I was amazed that not only did it run, but I was getting a higher FPS in Linux, emulating windows, than I was in even a debloated Windows install.
It's not emulation. So, good enough.
@@aaronjones4529yeah and it's only gotten exponentially better year by year in the last like 5 years or so. Still a long way to go though.
For desktops it sucks because all your peripherals usually have software components to fully utilize that are windows exclusive. And features like gsync, dlss, ray tracing and such are still nonexistent or...sketchy at best.
It is PERFECT for a tailor-made piece of hardware like the deck tho.
Still uses compatibility layers just smoother now and we have proton 👍 still not straight forward fucked if you run into an anti cheat that’s unsupported or devs are just being cunts (bungie with destiny 2)
THIS is why I dig Dave's reviews. He WILL point out the flaws. He's my top one and Jarrod's. They think about the consumer first and if it's worth our money or if we'll even like it. I did not know that the steam deck was made to last a few years. It's a good point on it and would love to hear from Asus or if they'll make the new Ally 2 more long lasting. Either way, now I got doubts. I might still buy it, especially cuz my vacation time is coming up and need one or a laptop. Either way, thanks Dave. You rock!
That performance gap with the new update really makes your review THE DEFINITIVE one to watch, it really is a surprising gap :o
It'll only get better again Asus has said ...
@@losteden6390 ye, nobody cares what Asus says. Shit manufacturer
@@losteden6390 ya i def believe it this product is like brand new
why surprising? it should be performing like a 7840u, day 1 it performed like a 6800u lol
@@darkdiablo1601 if i spent up to 1k on a handheld which ones the best
The situation is a bit more complex. TDP vs. TDP comparisons assume that every manufacturer used the standard voltage curve profiles that are made for the chip from AMD. Board manufacturers have the ability to increase the performance of a given TDP or range of TDPs by scaling the curve up.
You would not be able to see this if you only looked at the listed TDP, and a lot of the available sensors would still appear to operate under the normal limits. However, you can effectively have a 2-3W boost hidden into your "TDP" at any given level. This kind of boost can inflate your scores by up to 100% at lower TDP levels. Finding out if a device did this is a lot more work than anyone would want to do, and if you do not have a lot of devices with the same chip from different manufacturers, you'd never be able to pick out the the ones that juiced their numbers. Ally represents real performance for this processor.
This ^. I feel like if you look at the total power draw at 9W the Ally will be the lowest. If he would've matched the total power draw of the whole device the Ally would've been even better. AMD/Asus have definitely improved it a lot that's for sure.
Sure but the average user doesn’t care if it TDP varies or not. It’s literally about what they get at face value. If they both say 3W TDP, that’s what they will compare with the experience accompanying that.
Better than compare TDP only, you can compare battery life (for similar battery sizes of course - like the ally and the deck) - on games running at similar performance - like horizon 5 high 60 fps. Dave did that and the steam deck came up WAY ahead. So with or without “fake” TDP and profile curves/boosts etc, the Steam deck does provide value on lower wattage usage…
Exactly
Asus Rog Ally AutoDtp Tomb Raider 370 mhz cpu, gpu 880 mhz smooth 60fps shock.
The detail. He waited. Done each game battery drain test. That's alot of dedication. I love his videos because, his reviews always be on side of user perspective. Sweet, simple, short. Great review as usual. Thanks, I was waiting for yours to come.
Definitely
Really appreciate the extra mile you go through to deliver us the experience the manufacturer intended, instead of just using it as it and calling it a day. 🙏🏻
Your honest approach is the sole reason why I've been a long time subscriber. Well done. I have the Steam Deck and I enjoy the hell out of it... The Ally seems to be a great machine, but I'm hooked on this Steam community... They're so damn helpful and knowledgeable. My deck is literally getting repaired as we speak, no questions asked. Left trigger was sticking on occasion... They're all over it. So easy.
I also had that issue and got a free repair, and later on almost to the 1 year mark, was sent a brand new unit due to random resetting. Valve customer service is second to none
@@donniedarko4497 Awesome to hear. I'm dialed in with it. I don't really get into the crazy mods etc, I'm more or less, download and play. The only addition I've used is the Vibrant and the plug in that shows how games actually play based on a Platinum, Gold, Silver etc.
@@rescuerammer5357 definitely Steam deck is a great experience out of the box without tinkering. Only thing I'd recommend is "Cryo Utilities" as it's super easy for anyone and gives about 20 percent performance boost for free. Also emulation, but I've found that a lot easier with EmuDeck. Tinkering can be addictive bother
Hello Pal , Please I want to Know If Steam Deck Plays Fifa 23 pretty good ?
My girlfriend repaired my deck the other night 😏
The work that Valve has done behind the scenes to support the Steam Deck is really unparalleled compared to any gaming device I’ve seen. They have made it drastically better compared to a year ago. They even do stuff like release support for controllers and other external hardware that they don’t even manufacture. They’ve been killing it. I hope that ASUS does the same with the Ally, but it’s a lot to live up to. We will see!
Very unlikely to happen. Valve doesn’t make money on the Steam Deck, they make money from people buying games on the Steam Store. So they have a financial interest in supporting the Steam Deck for as long as possible. Asus only makes money from the initial purchase, so its in their best interest to release a new model as soon as possible and hope you will buy it.
@@feezee82 damn this is a great point. While I don't believe that they don't make ANY money on the steam deck (sure, I'm sure the profit margins may be a little tight but their is surely a profit margin nonetheless), you're right in that their bigger interest would be in ensuring that people continue to buy their games on the steam store which forces them to make sure that steam deck is always in tip top shape!
@@feezee82 Asus makes better and more powerful hardware for the right price, valve wont win competing with ASUS in hardware. Software is also looking sticky for valve because ASUS has connections with Microsoft.
Not to mention that Asus has a terrible update support on their ROG phones
@@undisturbed809
“Software is looking sticky for valve”
Bud, as long as Valve keeps updating SteamOS like it does now, there is no way that’s gonna happen. Microsoft has been very bad with their software updates and unless they release their own handheld console, I do not believe they are gonna bother updating Windows for handheld devices.
One of the things I had forgotten about coming back to PC gaming was the amount of troubleshooting you need to do before you can play a game. It's not terrible, but having to do that on a hand held would be a deal breaker for me.
this is where the steam deck prevails, for gaming it just works, only issues arise if you play untested games, but if its rated playable or verified it just works, now let me reiterate, thats for gaming, using the steam deck for desktop work still has a ways to go
Yep
I've played "unsupported" games and about 25% of even those games just work. And not to mention, Valve has been killing it in terms of software updates. In fact, I'd say that right now, I would get the Steam Deck over the Ally UNLESS you ONLY play games with anti-cheat crap.
The Steam Deck does a surprisingly good job of 'consolizing' the PC experience for lack of better words
I rarely ever have to troubleshoot anything. Usually, with both handhelds and my desktop, I just load and play. Unless I want to crank up performance.
You make a good point, Dave. When life has so much going on, you just want things simple and quick. That’s the appeal of consoles, quick resume and so on. Turn on and a couple of clicks and you’re set. Like a Nintendo Switch. No to bloat, pop ups, multiple programs to get things done, etc.
It's nice that they're looking into allowing more control to the device. Impatient to see what disabling cores on this thing will do, plus the potential for undervolting if UXTU allows so in the future.
The Ally is almost a Steam Deck ad. It has really allowed me to notice all of the small but brilliant decisions Valve made with the Deck beyond just raw horsepower.
100% agree. I decided to buy a Steam Deck after watching this video
Trackpads. That alone is such a massive benefit of the Steam Deck.
@@CosmicApe only for some people
@@brianv3ntura For quite a bit. I've read the lack of track pads bothers 100s of thousands.
If the Ally had track pads, better D PAD and buttons that don't stick, I would definitely buy one and sell my deck. That is way more important to me than getting a few more FPS from a game and a better screen
I have windows on my deck and can play everything I want.
Amazing product review and points of comparison against its competitors. Thank you for also breaking down some pros and cons of the design choices made by Valve vs Asus. Definitely allows for more informed buying decisions based on the use case of the consumer! Awesome job, Dave!
No shit.
Not surprised at all, ASUS really hasn't been on the ball lately across the board....at least they are getting their collective shit together and are fixing this one. Thanks for reporting on it Dave, I see no one else doing this lately!
I mean valve did it worse with the software pf the deck, so to be honest i guess asus is doing it better than valve xd
The first version of steam os 3.0 was crazy xd
@@Nsfwstar people forget so fast. ppl are comparing the ally to the already updated SD , the SD issues at launch too. but people forgot all about that LULZ
@@Nsfwstar Um, never said Valve was perfect, not even once. I've got a SD, and I've had it since launch. They fixed it up good, and hopefully so does ASUS on this one. I'm not a Windows guy so it's not in my wheelhouse so to speak, but I hope they succeed, it's a good handheld all told.
@@NsfwstarValve fanboys are rabid, it’s crazy.
@@Tha_Lyons The bigger problem is that the ASUS story regarding motherboards came out right around reviews dropping. It's not just about the SD software, it's about ASUS as a company not being trustworthy, beyond this product.
Phawx just posted a video today about optimizing the clocks to maximize the battery and it sounds like there's a ton of potential to improve this via software.
It's windows based. There will be tons of community support for this.
@Harvey Kent lmao, you sound like a clown. Superficial reviews? Okay bro
@@Cakebattered "It's Windows based" Are you implying Linux doesn't have community support? LOL
This is nothing new as it was around when Ayaneo 2 was released. If the demands on the Cpu and Gpu vary a lot it will cause the frame rate to be more unstable.
Yea there will be all kinds of software like that and thats one big advantage windows has and i watched his video today seems like you can really improve the battery life in some games. Im really excited for the ally been counting down the days.
Spot on. Most of the reviewer complaints I saw could be resolved by software/firmware updates. The big selling point for me is the multi-platform capability and the ability to install other apps. For simplicity/average user, Steam Deck might be preferable. I, for one, plan to strip the Ally of any bloatware as soon as I get it and tweak it to my liking, install emulators, etc. For that purpose, along with being able to step outside of the Steam ecosphere, I think the Ally is preferable.
This is the most honest and best review I have seen of a product. Well done. Subscribed.
I think this was the first review which really discussed the support philosophy from Asus and the user experience.
I know from experience that Asus is pushing the product to life-support when a new product is for sale - I had some smartphones with exactly this issue in my past.
More critically I see the user experience for now - Microsoft Windows is not made for such a device (at least for now) and their own solution is just a band-aid to get the system up running. That it is expected from the customer to do the configuration and optimization kills this device for many customers. Even thoug I have the experience I do no longer have the patience for doing this - in that regard Valve has simply the better solution.
If you want just mobile gaming without in-depth tinkering then you should get a Switch or a SteamDeck - if you want the power and flexibility and do not fear tinkering then the ROG Ally is a good choice.
Ironically, people said the same thing when the Deck came out ("If you are okay with tinkering, you can get deck")
That speaks volumes to Valve's efforts in improving Steamdeck and also standardising it. Because unlike the Steam Machines, which were basically too much and too many, Steam Deck will prolly not have such a fast cycle (maybe 3 years?) meaning devs can actually target it, and test and optimise around it.
A big difference is that the steamdeck is part of an ecosystem, and Valve continues to get returns from investing into the Steamdeck. For Asus, I expect they make large % of their profits on initial purchase (I don't know if they have their own Store in Armory care), so perhaps not a big incentive to keep investing it's improvement over time, like Dave said, they would probably prefer to sell you Ally2 in 2 years, which is a shame. I'm considering getting an Ally anyway to use as portable gaming/laptop.
I have an ASUS ROG Phone 5, and I think they only put out one or two updates during the entire life of the device. I took it to a phone repair shop a few months ago, and the tech there laughed when he saw the most recent update was January of 2022.
If I remember correctly most of the Steam deck reviews were the same when it was initially launched. That it's a product that "needs improvement". But Valve actually committed to it and supported the device and now we have an awesome version of the device. I hope Asus does the same here but like Dave said they are a hardware company. But here's to hoping.
for me the main problem of Ally is that it didnt really fix any of the problems people have with Deck .... on the contrary it made them even worse ... thx to being overly focused on "onpaprer" highest specs possible
@@kampru6867 BS they already fixed some issues like for example things in armory crate. And there will be further improvments. The Steam Deck also had its flaws when it came out.
Exactly what they doing with their laptop is what they going to do in their handhelds. Just hope they don't f*ck up this like their TUF gaming laptop
ASUS software support just plain sucks. Just look at their Armory Crate, or even their RGB software...utter garbage. Love their hardware, loathe their software.
@@roningai4791 you misunderstood what i meant ... i meant the complains reviewers had about the deck (so stuff like battery and so on)
They must have silenced you for speaking the truth
Actually, the silence was as deafening as the 9W performance:(
Valve being a software store means that they have an incentive to support the deck for a LONG time.
They aren't being pro-consumer. It is actually in their business interest to have long hardware life cycles (less r&d money) and to keep old hardware running, so that owners keep buying products (games) with practically no marginal cost of sale.
Yeah, no company is your friend. But steam is probably the closest "pro consumer" corporation we have today. Their hardware and software support is unmatched. The repairability on the steam deck, as well as keeping the software open is so rare these days.
And that's the whole "consoles business model." That's why console generations are supposed to last 6-7 years.
@@anakinskyguy6582 I think the deck can last longer than that. Since it is a pc and valve games/software have high longetivity.
Mac user over here… was between getting a Steam Deck or a ROG Ally, went for the Ally in the end. Using it as a standalone handheld and windows old and recent enough games, got tired of all the Parallels and CrossOver tinkering, it works don’t get me wrong, but just want the plug-n-play’est experience.
To my surprise, just swapping an Apple Studio display to the ROG Ally works 100%, even the camera, mic, speakers and connected keyboard/mouse peripherals to the screen.
That said, man, since I bought it, it was like 3hrs of just tinkering around to get all the apps updates, windows updates, BIOS updates, good god… makes one appreciate the 15mins open and use experience of getting a MacBook or similar (minus Apple being Apple tends to slash legacy software too unhinged).
That said, it’s an amazing handheld still today, crazy prices too during these holidays, got a -$200 for “Boxing Day Sales” and an extra -$100 open box, at a Best Buy.
Exactly. Thanks Dave. I was going to buy a 7840U handheld because I felt the benchmarks was so much better. However Asus is a large experienced manufacturer and uses 2 fans. An looks really nice.
Definitely nailed it on the support. Or lack of it. We’re upon launch and local resellers don’t have cases, the charger with HDMI port, etc. I’ll have to test it well when it comes because if I consider those pop ups a pain, I’ll just return it.
Had the steam deck for the past 6 months and absolutely love it. Still trying to stay on top of what’s happening with this product too but I won’t be sure until it falls into the hands of the public and the real problems are uncovered
Even then, my biggest concern is the point he raised with longevity, issue with big hardware manufacturers is if they're under a certain price, have the products don't work and then they'll last for a year or 2 max, fact of the matter is if I go to best buy and they tell me I would get geek squad protection on it, I'm simply not gonna get it
@@nonpondo_ that’s a really good point!
good to have you, your way of doing and seeing things in the review space on TH-cam
I don’t know if you’ve heard this enough but great video. Straight to the point. You touched on topics and stayed focused on them and did not go on a tangent and explained clearly. I got what I came for on the video and the 9 minutes flew by so fast. This was good. Thank you.
Dave is hitting all the right points. Even though it drains battery faster due to high Watts it charges a lot faster too. When I play BOTW on the steam deck I get 2 hours of batter but it takes longer than that to charge. My GPD Win 4 runs it at faster drain but I can recharge the battery in much less time and get back to being portable.
How does botw run on steam deck? Was there a lot of skipping due to performance? Was the gpd4 that much better?
@@Ifalvarado BotW can run somewhere between 40-55 fps (you could try tweaking the Graphic packs some more to get it higher).
Also, the game can become more demanding during combat so it's safer to run the display at a lower fps.
Wait, do emulators work on the steam deck
@@ZeroChanceLance they do, on rog ally too
@@ZeroChanceLance the emulation experience on the steam deck is much better than any other hand held out there right now
Great review! The problem is that they currently don’t have a way to financially keep the support for this device like you want. Can’t truly compare that aspect to valve. I see it being a new device every year or two which they specialize in unfortunately
Yup like how they handle their support on ROG phones only 1 year or 2 if you are lucky, from what I remember
Absolutely, and it is important to keep this in mind.
But the advantage of running native windows is that ASUS do not necessarily need to do anything for games to run because AMD did a driver update that lets it run for PC, or Microsoft did a DirectX update or whatever. Not because *they HAVE* to update it because *it doesn't work if they don't*
So it's give and take. The big concern to me would be stuff like stick replacements and general aftermarket support, but then again - if you manage to find the part numbers then Aliexpress will probably be able to provide.
Seeing all this handhelds comming out I am really looking forward to the next Steamdeck.
Hey Dave, long time viewer here! Recently purchased a steam deck and I was suffering from buyers remorse with the deck when I saw people raving about the ROG Ally. You're really helped me realise how nice the deck is and how long the shelf life is, and that for me as an emulation geek the deck is probably a better idea when it comes to battery life. I got dual boot working for windows with CoD. Thank you, have a great day!
Huge communities supporting a product they love.
This warms my heart feels like back when older games had huge mod followings like StarCraft broodwar. Quake 3 arena mods. Etc.
When so many people put in effort to make something they love better. It just becomes an awesome experience for everyone involved. And your interested in the game for many many years to come.
Steams huge community is what makes me come back to buy their games so I can play with all their stuff and support that communities provide.
10/10 steam keeps gaming alive.
My theory for the 9W performance is because it has 8 cpu cores, those 4 extra cores' impact are significant in a very limited power scenario.
Now if they disable those 4 extra cores on 9W that would be nice
And they have to disable those cores physically. It's known issue of Ryzen processors being underpowered on low wattage especially when battery is removed
From my testing of various games on a Steam Deck vs 6800U handheld, the CPU is not the issue, the GPU is. It rarely goes lower than 10W on the 6800U, meanwhile the Steam Deck GPU goes as low as 1W on some titles.
@@seeibe would be nice if you could do the test on the 7840U, because the 6800U has different GPU with a different architecture, so that conclusion can't be final
This, Is why I watch Dave2D and why I knew it wasn't all doom and gloom early on. Thank you for the video! Keep being great.
Dave always gave us the most accurate review that every other reviewers just never bother to realize it. Respect👏👏👏
Every reviewer? Idk man I'm all about praise but saying ALL the reviews for the ALLY were bad it just a bit dumb. The Phawx for example is continuously providing insights into the Rog ally and constantly reiterates that there's like going to be differences closer to releases etc etc. Not all reviewers "don't bother" to maintain accuracy...
Looks like you should check out The Phawx then. Dave didn’t even touch ground with VRR, which is the main reason for that 120Hz panel. Something creators like Dave always forget.
D4 this week and my Ally in a couple of weeks , Christmas has come early, Great content Dave!
My wishes as a Flow X13-XGM owner for the next Ally version:
- Larger Screen easily 10"+
- Strong kickstand
- Trackpad
- Removable controllers
- More buttons
- Another USB port
- Maxed out SSD option
- Camera front+back
- Detachable Keyboard Cover
Excellent video, Dave! However, I really appreciate MS Office in Ally. I am looking forward to using it as a handheld PC. Perfect choice for me.
Installing it takes minutes, so no reason to pre-install it.
@@Leynad778 Exactly. This is a gaming console first. Office being pre installed and for sure as usual with Windows, booting office 365, onedrive etc up by itself in the background all the time it's not only a waste of disk space, it's a waste of RAM, CPU and battery life for most of us. Windows in a handheld like this still feels like a nightmare. Don't forget the horrible modern windows standby problems.
@@azenyr Not to mention W11 too. A definite downgrade of W10
They could easily keep the support up if they dedicate a team for the original ROG Ally, they have the money to afford it, and there are still millions of programmers out of work, so there would be no excuse.
That being said, with ASUS being a hardware-based company, selling some of the best high-tech computers I've seen, they could easily make the ROG Ally upgradeable, and modular. Making it last FAR longer than any handheld on the market.
Asus is a hardware company first, so no, I don't expect them wanting their products to never need disposing
I don’t think they’re going to suddenly revise the entire system just to make it modular. Only thing that isn’t soldered is the ssd and an entire motherboard would be expensive. Plus, selling new, difficult to replace motherboards would be extremely difficult and not a good business move. Asus is a company, not a group of hobbyists.
They will just make Ally 2 in 6 months. Don't dream too loud.
My G14 stopped having driver/bios updates and improvements after half a year, and a bit more after the new one came out and now mine is completely abandoned. It's the maxed out 2500€ G14. Zero support. All the software support is now exclusively windows/linux updates and AMD/Nvidia drivers and that's it. Zero Asus involvements.
@@azenyr what update do you want beside windows, and gpu driver? Are you really like bloated software getting update??
I had asus 10 years ago and newly asus lately. They had been decreasing bloatware to the max and build it as clean as possible. in the past they had software like splendid, wavemaxxx audio, touchpad driver, instant on, even powerdirector😂
@@azenyr pp ppplllppppppp
I bet the printer spooler is enable as well. Main issue with the ally is windows. Having been running modded/stripped down version of windows for year, you can get 10-15% more FPS if you take out all of windows bloatware. Windows needs a one click gaming button that pauses all unneeded windows stuff. I bet the ally gets more fps and batter life with tiny11 or ghost spectre w11…
i might try to install atlas os
As always, Dave's heart is in the right place and is so big Asus might finally listen to him and us. If Asus announces a new ROG Ally in the near future, I fear this device will have better lifespan from using SteamOS bases firmware.
Love the takes and perspective on the ally.
I just bought my Steam Deck after watching all of those Ally reviews. The Ally can be powerful, but it is still not working as a console. You can not snooze it with a push of a button. You can do that with the Steam Deck and that is a must-have for this portable form factor in my opinion.
It does have a sleep function so you can pick up where you left of but it eats away battery. Wish it was as intuitive as my SD tho.
The sleep function is hit or miss on the deck, most of the time it just resets the game.
I’ve just bought a Deck too…. Today!
I’ve spent hours, maybe days on end researching and comparing both devices. I even have the Ally on order too, but I’ll cancel that.
It ultimately came down to the software and hardware synergy on the Deck.
I don’t want to use Windows and I don’t even want GamePass… I hate subscription models and don’t want to support them.
I’m quite new to Steam but I love what I see and I want more of that.
The Deck hardware is so much nicer. The Ally looks like a cringy cheap gaming PC. Plastic rubbish.
I also want to try trackpads. I love RTS games.
@@oo--7714 lol absolutely not ! even yuzu works
@@oo--7714 That's bullshit :p I've been using my SD for over a year now and it has reset my SD like 3 times in the thousands of times I've put it in sleep mode :p
Thanks for this update Dave, I was having doubts but this definitely made me pull on trigger for Rog ally now 🎉
Well you're right on the support stuff, Asus has a bad reputation there, it launches new cool stuff and then next gen is out of frame, like remember the external Gpu's stuff? the Mothership laptops which were supposed to be upgradable and then died, there's been several Asus stuff that never grew old and had a lack of support.
The performance for these devices seems to be in a good spot. I'd love to see people make more efficient batteries that last longer someday.
I remember that the deck had the same problems at launch with software issues and minor problems, If asus can keep up with fixing the software this device could probably be one of the best handhelds out there and the fact that they are already rolling out pretty good updates before launch is a good sign that they do intend to update the ally for a long time.
I think people are going a little too hard on asus, especially when the deck had the same problems at launch, as a deck user (and rog ally preorderer) I really want this to succeed because it will bring more pressure and competition to the handheld market.
Its all the steam deck fanboys lol
Asus probably won't support the Ally that long. Like you said, in 2 years people are gonna get the Ally 2. This is essentially a gaming laptop in the form of a handheld and Asus pumps out laptops left and right. That's why I went for the Steam Deck.
You made a good move. Which model did you get?
Same here. Ordered it today. The 512 model with etched glass.
I just don’t want to open it up, so I’ve gone for the highest storage.
@@MattWiles don't hesitate and upgrade your steam deck from 512 gb to 2Tb, I'm not even particularly smart or technical person in terms of electronics and i managed to upgrade it. Months ago 2230 2Tb's cost like 400 - 500, now it's half than that. You can probably wait it out if you want it... So it lowers even more.
Not only that, I just feel like Windows is not the best option when it comes to PC handhelds.
Although, ChimeraOS is a thing for Ally users to utilise soon for those who loved SteamOS as much as I do.
dnt buy asus they been pumping out sponsorships to try to hide the fact of their bios problem that fried every 7000x3d models while blaming the user and not replacing a single thing!
I've had the steam deck for a long time, but I am getting the ROG Ally. I'm okay with tinkering a bit. I've been doing that with my own computer forever. I will of course be removing that extra software for sure.
The main thing is there just simply are lots of games I like to play that don't work on the steam deck. Niche japanese games seem to have the hardest time just running, and its been a big pain point for me. So after being away from my computer a week and only having the steam deck I figured I did need something that just ran windows and that happened to be the weekend the preorder for these started.
Dave, thanks for the review! I heard some reviewers talk about input lag. Was that something you encountered with the Ally?
I own a steam deck since launch, and have been watching the inspired competition, here’s why no one has beaten the deck:
Inputs & price.
The entire experience of playing, buying and setting up games on the deck is really slick.
The reviewers show some of the AAA popular titles, but we all have that game that is 15 years old, you used to play with a keyboard and mouse, and now you’re curious whether you can play it again, but like a boss while taking a leak.
With the deck you can.
For me, this game is Splinter Cell Chaos Theory, its amazing. It runs amazing on deck too.
But its sooo much more fun with the Gyro Aiming, keyboard mapping and layering and trigger shortcuts.
You can make splinter cell play like assassins creed odyssey, by automatically lowering/equipping the gun at half trigger, scope on full squeeze, switch ammo types with the back buttons, etc etc.
All the inputs, especially starting at 400 eu, its amazing.
Stick in a 1 tb sd card and you’re golden.
Unfortunately, the reviews from IGN and other of the steam deck were made when it just launched, and they were ironing out the kinks. So it only got a 7/10.
But with how its working right now, I bet that would have been 9/10.
These competitors are coming close, but only offer windows machines to play Halo or other shooters, on my deck I can play Civ, age of empires, cities skylines, and Among Us, because of all the input mapping and track pads.
So, really the question is has any device beaten the Deck yet?
And these FPS and wattages numbers really don’t tell the whole story. Especially when you figure in the price….
I don’t know what TH-cam algorithm led me to this in my home feed, but thanks for this.
What a great, honest take / update on the ROG Ally.
Subscribed 👍🏻
4:90 - You can also limit the charging % on the Steam Deck, even limit the charging speed (so it won't heat up so much while gaming). With community tools and extras you can do almost anything with the steam deck. ROG can't seem to do anything that the steam deck can't, outside of the extra performance.
That's very cool
That's not true. The Ally has a native landscape display unlike the steam deck which is native portrait which means a bunch of older games don't instantly crash when launched.
Phawx explained and demonstrated this in one of his reviews.
Also a 120 hz display means that when you target 40 fps you won't get screen flickering that a 60 hz display would experience which means you can frame limit your games for a better looking performance while having very similar battery life to frame limiting at 30 fps.
Lastly even if we can potentially install Armory SE on a steam deck I doubt Asus will support the track pads like Valve does within SteamOS. Time will tell how that plays out.
I see no reason to run above like, 90fps Max on a portable device. 60 is fine with sync, and all resolution problems can be solved in software, and quickly, too.
Except for run so many anti cheat games
@@mutantmagnet owww my dear, dady Phawx tell u that ??? Ask him how much did Asus paid him.
Good review. The Steam Deck suffered from the same thing though, early release with barely finished software. It's almost a completely different machine now than from 12 months ago. I agree it needs to feel more like a console than a PC. The best feature by far is launching a game and being straight into the action, or even better unpausing from 3 days ago and picking up right where you left off. Microsoft needs to do a lot of work in Windows to get that level of refinement.
I have to disagree with this take. The Steam Deck experience today is practically identical to how it was in April of 2022 when I got my Steam Deck. Is it different? Yes, but that comes down to developer support of the steam deck. The actual interface and functionality is very similar. We’ve got new tools to control performance and battery life, sure. We have community tools to enable plugins and better desktop mode support, yes. But the fundamental paradigm of downloading and running games on the go is practically identical. The flow of the software is very similar. I don’t think that can appreciably change for the Ally as long as it uses Windows.
I really hope that since they're partnering with Best Buy, it means some stores might get demo units bc, while it's large, I just love the controls of the Steam Deck, and I would really want to get this in my hands to know how it compares. It does look cool, just different to a Steam Deck and some good/bad things respectively. I appreciate this more balanced review.
yeah same , it would be great to actually have this device in my hands before I even remotely think of jumping ship
I am extremely thankful for this video. It made things clear for me. Awesome delivery, great information, helpful visuals and great content.
Thank You sir! God Bless You 🙏🏾
The SF6 example is interesting considering the number of people jumping ship to the Ally because they're tired of 'jumping through hoops' to get games working on the Steam Deck. They're gonna be pretty disappointed when they realise they have more/different tweaking to do just to get games to run. The performance looks great though.
The main issue with this form factor that many people worry about is analog stick draft. Unless these are using hall sensors, they should at least have detachable controls like the Switch so you can just either replace the controllers or just send the controllers in for repairs.
I have replaced the the right joystick on my steam deck. It's so easy and the community support is incredible. I think Asus would be wise to open up right to repair options like valve has. Xbox and Nintendo essentially make e-waste components, yes you can change them on their controllers but they are designed in a way you may break them in the process.
The joysticks are connected via daughter boards so replacing shouldn’t be too much of an issue
I think the last issue wouldn't be a huge a problem for me if ASUS would allow trading in older ROG Ally's for a discounted newer version in the future. I'm really hoping that ASUS could polish its system better in the future because the Ally has my vote when it comes to hand-held gaming devices in the market.
OMG thank you so much for this! People keep comparing a "Prototype" to a 1 year released device. I had the SD and it was amazing. But the ROG Ally is going to push the AAA titles and low end gaming too like emulation. I am excited to see what the Ally looks like in a year. The SD got better after the year and I see the Ally doing the same thing.
thx - the best Asus rog ally review so far…long time support will be crucial for the success of this device!
I agree with the premise of this video. Though I've had some software glitches with my Ally, I haven't encountered any of the issues early reviewers had with stuck buttons.
Well said Dave! Especially the MS Office, seriously, they expect kids to bring this to school when they forget their laptops and the Ally save your day scenario 😂.
But there needs to be justifications for ASUS to support Ally for long term which I suspect is for their ROG Armory Crate to receive valiant supports and increased user base, so they can comfortably support Ally in the long run. 🤞
I don’t even see any kids using this realistically, the nintendo switch yes but this is more of a console for adults
@@chikensaregood9500 hmm.. I guess this is a societal impact. The kids around my area are always using the latest gadgets, even for primary school kids (elementary schools for other countries), they carry iPhone 11-13 easily. But if you ask me, yes the Nintendo switch is much easier to use as opposed to a handheld Windows console.
@@chikensaregood9500 maybe not kids but teens i could see actually using this
With Steam Deck, the support and platform is the product. And it’s more so a product for the developers, which is why you see the new AAA games coming with Steam Deck support almost built in. A open pc console with an infinite, reasonable game store. Ally has none of that, which is why it might not fail now, but if will fail its customers in the long run. To this day you can pick up an original Game Boy and play and have a good time. That’s the Deck.
The whole card failure point is also a major reason why I'm not trusting the ROG for awhile. ASUS Rog has been pitched by many as "great cause they have Xbox Gamepass". As much as that can give you access to AAA games, it also is fairly limited once you go outside of that ecosystem. SteamOS works best with Steam, which while may not be as perfectly current as third party launchers, still has the bulk majority of games you could want.
I feel like for games like Halo, Call of Duty, you get the better specs, esp if through Xbox's own gamepass system. But if you want to have optimization for lower powered games or anything through Steam, good luck, since SteamOS does the best at power management across games so you don't have 2 hours of gameplay with older games.
The Ally is already getting support before it’s official release. Considering that, it’s impressive and I’m sure Asus will continue to support the handheld. If the reviews have any use, it’s to show how much Asus is listening to feedback. Steam deck was no angel day one, that system was giving me tons of issues, it’s a process but hopefully enough Asus continues to listen to feedback to help this handheld grow like the Steam Deck has.
Dave i got that ally and its a beast. Why does everyone hate on it so much? It literally plays MW3 better than my rig and im rocking a rtx 2080 super
Easily the best review out there.
You’ve touched base on what a regular persons experience would be.
Is it just me or is there no sound?
EDIT: There's sound now!
Video is still being processed by TH-cam.
There's sound for me, but the video is only 360p atm, so i'm gonna wait a few more minutes.
We need to wait until Asus fully updates Armory Crate. When they add the ability to disable cores, I think that is where we will see the biggest gains in low wattage performance. Going from 8 to 4 cores should (in theory) boost performance of the remaining 4 cores while maintaining the same low 9w. If that theory holds true, then the RDNA 3 and Zen 4 APU should out perform the Deck's RDNA 2 and Zen 2 APU purely from efficiency. Again, no way to confirm this until Asus releases that feature.
I think its important to consider the user experience of the Steam Deck like you mentioned. Is the Ally more powerful? Yes but at what cost? Windows isn't too bad to navigate on a desktop or laptop but this is a handheld. Another really key thing that the Steam Deck does really well are pre-compiled shader packages. Steam Deck is basically the only PC device where you don't have to worry about shader compilation. There are just too many advantages in my mind, despite the terrible screen. I'd go Steam Deck all day.
Thanks for the video Dave! What game are you playing at 5:40, the 2D game? Thanks!
Looks like Dead Cells
Just a tidbit; @ 4:55, the feature is (what I believe) a staple for all ASUS laptops. I have a ROG Z13, and it has the same app with that feature as well - and it is definitely appreciated knowing my battery has a longer lifespan.
Its an all in one, portable gaming, desktop gaming with xg mobile and home pc when docked to a monitor. That's a big thing missed from the review, idea is that it can replace many things you have, laptop, desktop and tablet and perform better than those. With a portable monitor, wireless keyboard n mouse Yr ready to go content creating.
Yes change the internal specs every year or so, it's what laptops manufacture do (and mobile phones). Just keep the layout the same. Makes sense to get your moneys worth and improve on performance on the same games.
Gaming mobile phones always change the spec every year for performance gains.
If they don't change people will just buy laptop or other handheld gaming brands as shown on your review.
This will kill off the steam deck and version 2 will just be laughing at it. Low wattage performance on steam deck isn't that much better. Plus most game you can't play or just really bad quality due to not being powerful enough.
The ally has flexibility, and expansion from the XG mobile. Ticks alot of boxes but would have been good to have ocilink or tb 4 support due to the price of the XG mobile.
I remember the steam deck being so glitchy when it came out and only supported a hand full of games. People where modding this to install windows and use as an all in one but it isn't a good experience. The ally is just something what comsumer want and will more developement it will be a killer
I get what you mean, Dave. As someone in engineering, it surprises most people when I use "basic" machines like an iPhone. For most other things? Absolutely I want an Android so I can spec/modify it. But I bought my phone for the fact that it "just works" and it saves me time. It allows me to leave my engineering work separate from family time and such. I'm sure I'm not explaining it well, but that's kinda my take.
I have had this exact same situation but with video production on MAC vs PC. I loved my PC. Built a computer and everything. But I still switched to Mac because it just felt so intuitive to use and also because all of my devices and apps synced so well out of the box. As a business owner that time saved is priceless.
Your rationality doesn't make sense. You want a phone that "just works" so that's why you bought an iPhone? So what you're implying is that NO android phone in the market "just works". You don't have to justify your purchase by subtly putting down every other product just to try and flex that you bought an iPhone. My Pixel, Galaxy, Xiaomi, Red Magic, etc ALL "just works". They all do the "phone" stuff just fine. A $300 phone does the "phone" stuff just fine. All of the phones that I mentioned do things that an iPhone would only dream of, but because an iPhone can't do them or have those features, they often get called gimmicks, that is until Apple adopts it and THEN it becomes a must have.
@@Gabilletagot a bit too emotional there bro😅
@@paracetamol9116 someone doesn't have a real comeback 🤡
@@Gabilleta Considering he’s getting actual likes instead of liking his own comment like you are, I’d say it was a pretty good comeback/point lol.
Anyway, I’m familiar with Android devices. That’s actually why I said I specifically like them when I want to get to my engineering side. But when I’m at home with my family, I just want a simple device that works and isn’t over complicated. One that won’t give me “Application has stopped responding” or “SystemUI has stopped responding” (the latter coming from a surface duo 2).
An iPhone or even a simpler device like even a regular old flip phone are just a lot better because they don’t have so many complications. It just makes it so you don’t have to tinker with so many things. Even iOS is getting that way these days and the setup is getting super complicated (see Stage Manager on iPads) which is unfortunate.
Like Dave said, it’s not something you can really explain. It’s just something you get as you get older. You just want something straightforward outside of work (especially engineering) to have fun with your family. Doesn’t mean you hate the more advanced stuff. You just want something abstracted to as simple as possible.
Update**** currently this thing is amazing and blows the steam deck out in my subjective opinion... obv objectively, it's faster for newer games. But tbh can't go wrong with any of these things now a days
Holy shit, the control setting are very barebone, it doesnt even have gyroscope, per game profile, advanced deadzones, etc. Steam deck customization is just mind blowing. It's even work for non-steam games
Nice analysis! Really good look at some of the intricacies that most reviewers don't talk about.
I love this thing, it’s a great hand held, it also works well as a mini computer, turbo mode is insane when it’s plugged in. I like to play Darkest Dungeon 2 at 4K and steam deck really struggles (you can tell by how slow the coach moves), while is plays and looks fantastic. Had it running Spider-Man at very high in 4K. So yeah definitely for retro games, steam deck is probably better. Windows is annoying on a handheld, but once you in a game it’s amazing.
🤡
I'm sure Valve will release software updates to make SteamOS better, but the performance of Steam Deck won't change. Both of these products will have Gen 2 versions within 2 years so just decide which one you can live with more easily today.
Well you can overclock the gpu to 2000 undervolt so your statement is not entirely true
@@ThaexakaMavro Numbers schnumbers. Video of it running RPCS 3 God of War 3@60fps or your statement is untrue.
Yeah it was crazy after I saw the reviews I cancelled my preorder. The reason ? After seeing the reviews it wasn’t much better than my SD. But NOW I placed my preorder again for the Ally 😂. Roller coaster of a week !
Clean and serious work done here, well done and appreciated 👍
The dedication Valve has shown not just with hardware, component accessibility, or even software… but even supporting devs in getting their games running on Deck (look at TLOU for example), gives me immense faith in the longevity of the Deck. ASUS on the other hand I have zero faith with.
I own a steam deck and been using it for a while and love it I can play any game I please 😊❤
why a single male youtuber like dave made far better review than corporate Linus Tech Tip
Come on Dave, we ne ayeneo 2s review!! You had it for a week already!
My main quirk with the steam deck is many games aren't supported and you have to go through loops to get them running anyway. With ROG Ally it's windows and way easier for me to move what's already on my pc on there and have the same experience being able to run any programs&games I want
Thx for the review dave. Been a while.
Great words. Great review. Listen to this man, Asus. Thank you for all you've done Dave2D 🙂
That was a great review. I pre-ordered the Ally but after seeing how easily steam deck is to play I'm more interested in that now.
You didn't go wrong don't worry. Newer device and much more powerful.
It's not as easy as he makes it sound. You still have to wtweak most of the games you want to play. Just the other dasy, I had to switch the default profile on a game I was playing to proton experiamental (after trying several proton builds) and then I had to drop back into SteamOS to specify a community controller profile because the default one simply didn't work with that game. If it's an older game or not "Steam Verified"... which is still about 30% of the ones I try) you will have to fiddle and tweak to get them to work and a lot of times, they stil don't work no matter what you do.
Stay with the Ally , much more compatibility , better performance , old AAA games playing over 60 fps will be awesome, better screen
The buttons/ pads and the ergonomics on the deck make it by far the most comfortable hand held device. It doesn't feel like just another pc
@@gregyance9901nah Asus is a shitty company
You pretty much convinced me to get a steam deck. Thank you.
Well said, Dave. Asus is all about selling us new hardware often but lack of long-term support kills it for me. I am going for the Steam Deck!!
Odd I still get support for my old ass motherboards and laptops I have. Hell, even my ROG2 phone still has support even though I don't use it. Not sure what he means by support...
Best review I’ve seen thank you for your honesty
The thing with the battery conditioning is built-in to Steam Deck. It automatically regulates charges to under max to prolong battery health.
Yeah, the last few precent takes like 20 minutes to charge
ROG Ally is the beast and best better build berrer hardware like speakers better cooling and is cheap and can be buy at any time for same price than aya neo 2s
it's 360p only for me but I do hear sounds
These updates are poised to elevate the device far beyond the competition, rendering other handhelds comparatively inadequate. The level of excitement surrounding this product is palpable, and I am eagerly looking forward to experiencing firsthand the remarkable features and performance offered by this cutting-edge device.
You sound like an ad...
@@luckysxm 😅😅Not really, i just love the Rog Ally
Asus is that you on your alt account?
This review is a masterpiece. Well done
I'm glad I got mine from Best Buy, since I can just return it. I thought SteamOS had jank, but I never thought I would fall out of love with this thing in just one day.
From the first hour (after updating everything) of tweaking my Ally and the 10 solid hours that followed, I could not get a single feature working correctly or consistently.