You should mess with the desktop mode more often. It's called KDE Plasma desktop, and it's simply the most customizable software you can probably ever run into. It's insane how many things you can change on this thing.
Mine says 99% health. I don't know how reliable a metric that is?
Lately, I've been playing on battery exclusively and basically going with the 1 gaming session = 1 battery charge regimen to self-regulate. I may need to re-evaluate this as the battery ages, but it's good discipline for me at the moment…
I do this too. I can get about 2hrs on most games which is great for keeping me from staying up all night. Alas, Factorio sips battery though… sometimes I still fall down the dark hole of growing the factory for many many hours at a time.
I think I read somewhere that Factorio is more efficient running under Linux/Mac because it takes advantage of some quirk in the Unix forking mechanism that Windows can't use? I don't know if this means it would burn through battery even faster if the SD ran Windows, but it wouldn't surprise me…
I'm getting a new OLED Steam Deck in the mail within the next hour or so, so I'm glad to hear its battery is handing well.
I have an original LCD Steam Deck from their initial announcement of the device, which is still showing 100% battery health. The battery doesn't last very long unplugged, though. I've had to make sure I have a charging cable everywhere I go. So I'm looking forward to the longer lifespan of the new Steam Deck.
The OLED deck in general just gets so much better battery life than the LCD. Getting 2.5 hours instead of 1.5 hours on a demanding game is a huge increase.
I have seen similar features on phones. Luckily my LG G4 has replaceable batteries. I can confirm that multiple times I have seen my battery reported as fully healthy, only to open up the phone and find a spicy pillow.
So it may be useful for some things but I would not be too heavily reliant upon this without fully understanding where that % comes from.
I got a pre-order LCD Deck (256GB) from mid-October. While I don't game too much on mine but mainly do desktop work, mostly server management and web development, it holds about 3 or 4 hours depending on how heavy the task is. When I play No Man's Sky it'll last about an hour.
I can't see battery health as easily in GNOME tho. But I'm not complaining. This is while being plugged into a USB-C external 1080p OLED monitor and mouse and keyboard connected with Bluetooth.
For people wondering how the battery health is calculated, I'm guessing it's what the factory max charge was in watt hours and how many it comparably holds now during max charge. That's at least how I've seen battery health being calculated before!
I'm in the same boat with around 80%... Original 512gb and it's spent the last few years entirely plugged in. Eventually I'll have to use the more battery health as an excuse to upgrade to the OLED.
Have you looked at any of the OLED screen upgrades for the deck?
I am not a huge Deck user, meaning most of the PC time and games are played on my actual PC. The Deck is only a secondary device, for a few times here and there. I have over 130 hours on RetroArch, and a few hours on various other stuff. Therefore its expected that the battery is still in good condition.
94 % 2022 LCD the Deck is my main gaming device and is mostly always docked or plug in when i play so it's not that bad and thanks for the TIL about checking battery health
Actually it would probably be even better then that if it wasn’t plugged in all the time. Without battery conservation on, the battery lifespan is reduced by being plugged in constantly.
Mine seems to have plenty of capacity left but has trouble powering my xr glasses below 60% if I'm gaming. Also if it's cold it will shut off under load until it's warmed up. I got mine really early around May 2022 I think.
Considering I got mine fixed less than a month ago and haven't been using it at much, I'd hope the battery would be at 100% health. Not 100% sure since I haven't been on desktop mode since getting it back, though.