Valve is working on an easy wizard to make this possible, but if you want to dual-boot both operating systems right now, you’ll need to roll your own pre-boot solution. Ditto for dual-booting Windows and SteamOS. One, it’s Windows 10 or nothing for the moment: Windows 11 will have to wait for a fresh BIOS that Valve hasn’t finished yet. Naturally, people have wanted to install Windows on the Steam Deck ever since the portable PC’s announcement, and today Valve has officially released drivers for its customized components, making it pretty close to a plug-and-play experience. Though the Steam Deck runs a highly-customized version of Valve’s Linux-based SteamOS, and uses it to get some rather amazing gaming performance out of its AMD hardware, the gadget is more than capable of running other operating systems.
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