Yes, its basically a saturation slider, but we all know other companies would go “improve the screen through software? Are you nuts? We’re about to launch an OLED model!”
Yes, its basically a saturation slider, but we all know other companies would go “improve the screen through software? Are you nuts? We’re about to launch an OLED model!”
They so much don’t care, so they designed their own OS, APU, Proton and supported and improved their product almost 2 years.
A salesman doesn’t have to care WHICH product you buy in order for him to dress up in a suit to sell you SOMETHING.
They/Valve recognize that most people just stick to what is easy. If they have a Steam Deck, it’s very likely they will just buy most of their games on Steam since that is the easy route.
They put effort into making you want to use Steam so you do most of your gaming within the Steam system. All of that support and improvement facilitates an experience that makes it easy to stay there and buy there.
And I do not know if you cannot read, or only pick what words you want to read from an entire sentence and see that as the whole statement. Because I did not say “they do not care about anything”, I said:
>A salesman doesn’t have to care WHICH product you buy in order for him to dress up in a suit to sell you SOMETHING.
>They/Valve recognize that most people just stick to what is easy.
Well, no. The easiest way is chosen by competitors - take market ready-made processor solutions and install Windows. Valve’s way has nothing in common with simplicity.
>All of that support and improvement facilitates an experience that makes it easy to stay there and buy there.
Sure thing, they support their another product. They complement each other. What’s wrong with that?
>And I do not know if you cannot read, or only pick what words you want to read from an entire sentence and see that as the whole statement.
I can read, do not worry. But don’t simplify everything to shopping with Steam. They are expanding and trying a new niches.