this post was submitted on 22 May 2024
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Steam Deck
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A place to discuss and support all things Steam Deck.
Replacement for r/steamdeck_linux.
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That depends on what they bought the Deck for. Not everyone has much of an interest in playing games that require the trackpads, so there's still a big market for handhelds that cover the rest.
IMO that's just one of a hundred reasons that trackpads are better for the space they take. You can make them mouse input, that doesn't mean you need to. That is level 1 trackpad use, using them as the hardware was inteded. The software it ships with heavily suggests making it your own. Having the ability to set up a pad specifically for map interaction, or for QAM buttons to have 16 extra virtual input buttons (really nice for RPG's with lots of keyboard buttons for opening menus, such as Skyrim) or a button combination for auto-walk/sprint.
Without the trackpads you're just missing a full spectrum of possible inputs that are free real estate for input remapping. On top of just the ease of use of not having to control a cursor with an analog stick... shudders. I personally would also argue that just because I only play Roguelites on the Steam Deck doesn't mean that a dual-stick analog is all I need, as I've found many uses for the trackpads that enhance that experience.
Anyway, I'll I'm positing is that trackpads have been slept on since the Steam Controller and people don't realize all the ways that they can be easily incorporated without making it "just adding mouse input." They have always been so much more than that, that relegating them to "just mouse input" is a bit of a disservice.