DF Direct Weekly talks Switch Pro leaks and Steam Deck/Elden Ring reactions
DF Direct Weekly tallies up its 51st show, but it’s actually our 52nd week – we took a break for Christmas – meaning that this week is our one-year anniversary! And it’s a particularly meaty episode this week as the team convene to wrap up discussions on Elden Ring and Steam Deck, specifically by tackling virtually every question we received on both topics from backers of the DF Supporter Program.
Looking at the table of contents below, you should get some idea of how those particular discussions play out, but we also spend a good deal of time looking at the massive Nvidia leak and its implications for Switch Pro (aka Switch 2, Switch Model S ad infinitum). We call it a leak, but actually Nvidia was subject to a massive cyber-attack and the full extent of the stolen data remains to be seen. In the meantime, we should expect to see various information spill out: we already have some idea of the kind of GPU configurations we should expect from Team Green’s next-gen GPUs, while the Switch successor information is intriguing.
00:00:00 Introductions00:01:27 Steam Deck coverage and thoughts00:10:38 Steam Deck Q1: Do you think the Deck passes the “significant other couch test”?00:12:28 Steam Deck Q2: What happens if you put in a aftermarket NVMe or install Windows without proper drivers00:15:42 Steam Deck Q3: Is there a danger of developers being held back by Steam Deck?00:19:38 Steam Deck Q4: Will issues with AMD GPU drivers hold back emulation on the Steam Deck?00:22:06 Steam Deck Q5: Do you think it would be feasible for Valve to integrate the functionality of a 50Hz mode in the Steam Deck via a software update?00:27:06 Elden Ring coverage and thoughts00:33:19 Elden Ring Q1/Q2: Is the 10/10 warranted for Elden Ring/what is causing the poor frame-rate in Elden Ring?00:42:25 Elden Ring Q3: Should From Software have reached out to Bluepoint to inherit some of their expertise?00:47:25 Elden Ring Q4: What can be done with hardware and software to mitigate the issues in lieu of a proper fix?00:51:38 Elden Ring Q5: Elden Ring would be a DX12 game on the Xbox platform of consoles, which all use DX12 anyway, so why doesn’t it seem that any of them suffer from shader compilation issues in any game really?00:52:43 Elden Ring Q6: Are there more things companies like AMD, Nvidia and Valve can do to help improve the experience for users?00:56:05 Nvidia leak suggests new Switch hardware specs01:02:55 Resident Evil 2, 3 and 7 gets next-gen patches01:05:15 DF Supporter Q1: Do you think that GT7 was held back by its cross-gen nature? And to what degree?01:12:09 DF Supporter Q2: Would you consider an enhanced PS5 that’s more XT than Pro to be worthwhile?01:13:48 DF Supporter Q3: Is it fair to say that raw compute is becoming an increasingly less relevant factor in the performance equation?01:17:12 DF Supporter Q4: Do you think that rasterisation performance will be less important in the PC GPU space in the future?01:20:42 DF Supporter Q5: What are your thoughts about the no doubt inevitable push for 8k next-gen?
What I find most fascinating is apparent confirmation of a tweet from renowned leaker kopite7kimi who revealed that Nintendo would be basing the next Switch on a revision of the Tegra T234 processor, dubbed T239. This suggests a big GPU based on the Ampere architecture matched with a proliferation of ARM CPU cores (T234 has 12 of them). Assuming it’s based on 7nm lithography, this is a surprisingly large chip for a handheld machine – and a potent one. I would urge some caution here: Nintendo values practicality over performance, essential in a handheld, so we should expect conservative clocks in favour of good battery life.