iknt,

For KDE, Valve found it easier to work with KDE devs than GNOME devs.

AnUnusualRelic,
@AnUnusualRelic@lemmy.world avatar

Doesn’t kde work on debian? I haven’t used it on the desktop in ages, but that seems odd.

On second thought, they may not have the most up-to-date version. So maybe it’s that.

And if steam could make a Qt client while they’re at it…

HopFlop,

Of course it does. OP asked multiple questions, this was sipposes to answer why they used KDE instead of Gnome. I personally think Arch would have the advantage of having the newewst drivers, Proton version etc. available.

delirious_owl,
@delirious_owl@discuss.online avatar

My hair is a bird.

john89,

Big surprise.

uzay,

Another point for KDE might be that it works much better on a small screen that may be partially obscured by an overlaid keyboard. I used Bazzite Gnome for a while on the Steam Deck and I much preferred Plasma on there after switching back, despite using Gnome on my main system.

Telodzrum,

SteamOS, which is what is on the Deck, used to be Debian-based. The creation of the Deck led to an environment where a rolling distro was a better choice.

erwan,

I don’t think it has anything to do with Arch being a rolling distro.

SteamOS isn’t a rolling distro, it’s by releases controlled by Valve.

Even on a Debian base they could have done the same, like Ubuntu releasing versions independently from Debian.

Because SteamOS is immutable, the simplest today would be to use a Fedora Atomic base.

CyberSyndicalist,
@CyberSyndicalist@hexbear.net avatar

Debian was planning on dropping 32 bit support and Steam is still a 32 bit application so valve freaked out.

SpaceNoodle,

More embedded Linux BSPs use Arch since it’s more easily stripped-down. Development of the Steam Deck would have started from the hardware up, not from a server/desktop distro down.

SGG, (edited )

Games need to live closer to the bleeding edge than a lot of other software.

Also, for wine/proton, and the other customisations built into the deck, it makes sense to pick a starting point that is more built for customisation. By that I mean there was probably less things they needed to add or remove at the start.

As mentioned, it’s also likely there was personal bias internally. But even that can be a valid reason as they need to be familiar/comfortable with the starting distro.

Not saying that Debian cannot do it, but doing it this way probably made valve’s employees lives easier.

Zeppo,
@Zeppo@sh.itjust.works avatar

I assume because it’s more customizable.

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