A new update introduces a new fan curve. | Photo by Vjeran Pavic / The Verge

Valveā€™s latest SteamOS update is a big one for Steam Deck fans ā€” and I am literally talking about the fan in the handheld gaming PC. One frequent complaint about the Steam Deck is its at-times loud and high-pitched fan whine even while playing lightweight games. Some, including my colleague Sean Hollister, have tried a DIY solution to fix the whine, and iFixitā€™s replacement Steam Deck fans are already sold out despite being on sale for less than a week.

With SteamOS 3.2, though, Valve introduced a new OS-controlled fan curve thatā€™s intended to make things better. ā€œThis means that overall itā€™s smarter, more responsive to whatā€™s happening on and inside Steam Deck, and quieter ā€” especially in low usage situations,ā€ the company said in a blog post (emphasis Valveā€™s).

To see if I could notice a difference, I installed the update on my Steam Deck and tried a few games. In my short and extremely unscientific testing, my impression is that Valve has made some great improvements.

Iā€™m a fan

I first booted up Rogue Legacy 2, a sidescrolling roguelike that isnā€™t too graphically intensive. I immediately noticed that the fan was dramatically quieter ā€” I could only hear it sporadically ā€” and with the speakers turned up, I couldnā€™t hear the fan at all. I had a similar experience with Vampire Survivors, though I havenā€™t had time to get to a typical endgame, where the entire screen becomes filled with enemies and weapons ā€” Iā€™m curious to see if that will push the fan more.

In Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice with settings cranked to the max, the fan is still audible, though itā€™s generally much quieter when compared to the old fan behavior, which you can toggle back to in the settings menu if you want. With the new update installed, I also havenā€™t heard the fan while idling on the Steam Deckā€™s menu screen, which was one of my biggest pet peeves with the device.

SteamOS 3.2 also lets you change in-game refresh rates on the fly right from the three dots menu button. ā€œThe default is 60Hz (which can be frame-limited to 60, 30, and 15fps), but you can now slide it down to 40Hz (with frame limits at 40, 20, and 10fps),ā€ Valve says. Lowering refresh rate is one lever you can pull if you want to improve battery life.

You can read the full patch notes here. And thanks to a Steam client update, Steamā€™s Remote Play Together feature, which lets you play local multiplayer games over the internet, is now ā€œcompletely functionalā€ on Steam Deck.

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