My main laptop is literally 16:10, same res as a deck, pretty sure most Macbooks and productivity monitors are 16:10 too, my gf even snagged a 30" 16:10 monitor
Comment on Decksight, an OLED screen replacement for LCD decks, is now in crowdfunding
SkaveRat@discuss.tchncs.de 6 days agoIt’s easier to source a screen with a particular size that has standard resolution.
The steamdeck has a super awkward resolution that doesn’t fit into any standard aspect ratio. Which creates problems with some games.
If you want to play games on a lower resolution for performance reasons, you can always just to that. Games don’t need to run on the native resolution.
Playing a lower resolution on a screen that has a higher one will generally also make the image look nicer, as the DPI is higher. (just be careful and don’t scale to some weird fractional scales)
LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com 5 days ago
proceduralnightshade@lemmy.ml 6 days ago
1280x800 is 16:10, a standard aspect ratio, and isn’t far from 16:9 at all. 720p (HD) is 1280x720
Yeah they don’t. The Deck’s resolution is fine. Do you have any examples of games that don’t run well on the deck?
Natanael@slrpnk.net 6 days ago
Upscaling is available, and especially if the higher resolution is a clean 2x then doing it with minimal artifacts it’s quite easy
proceduralnightshade@lemmy.ml 6 days ago
This may be feasible for WQHD, but upscaling from 960x540 > 1920x1080 doesn’t really sound like an upgrade from WXGA anymore.
Another problem is that while there are some 3D games that support internal upscaling (FSR etc), not every game has the option to scale the UI indepently so things look extremely small at higher resolutions. The games that support both should be an exception and look better on a higher DPI screen.
I do believe that you could either slightly increase the resolution and screensize to 1600x1000 or 1600x900, or just use a WQHD-screen so you can get clean 2x upscaling from 720p.