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At long last, the Steam Deck UI has replaced Steam's Big Picture mode

It's been a long time coming, but Valve has finally taken Steam's old Big Picture mode—with all its blurry visuals and tabs that straight-up don't work—and replaced it with a new, Steam Deck-inspired UI. It came as part of a hefty Steam client update released yesterday, and in my testing seems to work pretty well, but some users are reporting a few kinks that still need to be worked out.

I've put some pictures of the new UI below, and it'll be incredibly familiar to anyone who's futzed around with a Steam Deck. It's pretty much just the standard interface of Valve's handheld blown up to fit the dimensions of a proper TV. The mode now drops you straight into a list of your recently-played games, rather than letting you pick between Store, Library, and Community (the first and third of which usually just crashed Steam whenever I picked them) like the old version.

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The main screen for Persona 3 Portable within Steam's new Big Picture UI.

The new launch screens for games are strikingly similar to the ones on the regular desktop Steam client. (Image credit: Valve)
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A list of installed games shown in Steam's new Big Picture UI.

The new game library screen has switched from landscape to portrait game art. (Image credit: Valve)
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The main Steam store shown within the Steam client's new Big Picture UI.

A store that works! They said it couldn't be done. (Image credit: Valve)
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A list of recently-updated games shown within Steam's new Big Picture UI.

Big Picture is now more up-front about which of your games has been patched recently. (Image credit: Valve)
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A screen showing the option to install Alpha Protocol in the new Big Picture UI for Steam, with the game size listed before installation begins.

It's easier to see how big games are before you install them too, just like the desktop client. (Image credit: Valve)
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The Steam Big Picture UI showing an ongoing download for Alpha Protocol.

The download screen is now basically identical to the desktop version. Yes, I'm installing Alpha Protocol. Why aren't you? (Image credit: Valve)

On my Xbox One controller, navigation is now performed by whacking the glowy Xbox button at the top, which brings up a list of tabs like Recent, Store, Library and so on for you to flit between. It's a sleeker system than the old one, where similar tabs just loomed at the left-hand edge of your screen while you browsed your games. I expect it works similarly for people using non-Xbox gamepads, too.

It ran pretty much flawlessly on my machine—a mardy clunker running a 1080 Ti, 16GB RAM, and a Ryzen 3700x CPU—but user caution is advised at this point. A lot of Reddit users are reporting Steam Big Picture issues with in-home streaming, black screens, high CPU usage, broken controller inputs, and general lag in the UI. There's still work to be done, clearly, even if the only problem I had was that a bunch of the prompts still reference the Steam Deck instead of 'Your PC'.

You shouldn't have to delay the update if you want to give the new Big Picture some more time in the oven, though. You can still use the old mode by running Steam with the '-oldbigpicture' command-line option. Valve will be removing that option in a future update, mind you, but we've got that safety net for now.

Still, as someone who used old Big Picture mode pretty much every day, and who hasn't had any problems with the new version, I have to say it's a marked improvement. Being able to actually use the store in Big Picture mode after years of it spitting errors at me feels like a minor miracle, and the whole thing just generally feels a lot more sleek and modern. It's shallow of me, I know, but the way the new mode jumps between screens—all accompanied by Nintendo Switch-like clicks and whistles—just feels better. It's nice to play games on my TV and feel like I'm using software made this decade.

At long last, the Steam Deck UI has replaced Steam's Big Picture mode At long last, the Steam Deck UI has replaced Steam's Big Picture mode Reviewed by Unknown on February 02, 2023 Rating: 5

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