I love colony sims, factory/automation games, city builders, CRPGs. OpenTTD, OpenRCT2, Rimworld, Prison Architect, Factorio, Shapez 2… anything that heavily replies upon a mouse on PC, and is finicky to control with thumb sticks, is remarkable with the Deck’s track pads. I’ve also got a handful of desktop apps, added as non-steam games so they can be accessed in gaming mode, that benefit from track pads. I like being able to open a browser and flip toggles in Home Assistant or access the web UI for other things I host.
I also like to dock my Deck and my Pro 2 controllers (great for fighters, platformers and classic console emulation) aren’t gonna cut it for those games. The steam controller looks like I’d get everything I love about the Deck’s controls - while docked. That’s a big deal to me. Maybe I’ll get lucky and actually be able to snag one this year.
If you don’t play anything in those genres or never drop to desktop mode, you’re probably not missing anything. But I intentionally bought a portable computer and frequently use it like one.



Fail secure sounds good but now you also need to consider how quickly the brakes engage. Don’t want some random electrical hiccup locking up your brakes mid curve while you’re three-wide doing 70 on an interstate. Slowly draining capacitors or whatever to gradually engage them might be an option. Then you also, preferably, need some means of physically disengaging them. Otherwise you’re gonna get disabled vehicles in the middle of roadways that have to be dragged up onto flatbeds or the side of the road because the wheels won’t roll without restoring brake power first.