This company aims to offer a new gaming OS to compete with SteamOS and Windows

Daniel Sims

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Forward-looking: One of Steam Deck's most significant achievements is proving that developers can contort a PC operating system to provide an accessible interface for compact handheld gaming consoles. Playtron hopes to build on Valve's strategy to offer a gaming-oriented OS that supports multiple PC game stores and form factors, possibly starting with the Steam Deck.

Gaming startup Playtron is developing an operating system that splits the difference between Windows, SteamOS, and Android to provide a platform-agnostic experience. Aside from its description on the Playtron website, details on PlaytronOS are vague. However, the company is giving GDC 2024 patrons a sneak peek at the operating system.

Playtron describes its OS as similar to the Windows gaming ecosystem, except that it is extracted into a separate lightweight OS. Like SteamOS, it lets users play PC games with an interface conducive to non-desktop devices--in other words, it's controller-friendly. PlaytronOS differs in its support for multiple game storefronts, including Steam and the Epic Games Store.

It's unclear how the Linux-based system will run Windows games, but Proton – the key behind SteamOS's extensive range of compatibility – is the likely answer. The clip above shows Playtron running various titles on a Lenovo Legion Go.

Currently, the operating system supports Arm and x86 architectures. The company plans to launch it for handheld gaming PCs later this year and for 5G mobile devices in 2025. PlaytronOS will eventually branch out to desktop PCs, TVs, VR headsets, data centers, and cars.

Playtron's roadmap remains vague, but it may license its portable OS to companies like Asus, Lenovo, MSI, and GPD, which recently released Windows-based Steam Deck competitors. Although these newer Windows handhelds are faster than the Steam Deck, Windows 11's desktop-oriented design holds them back.

Valve hasn't begun licensing SteamOS, but Bazzite can clone it on various devices. Microsoft said it plans to address Windows's problems on handhelds but hasn't explained how it intends to do that without screwing up the desktop experience.

Playtron hopes to target the "core casual" audience, which it claims is underserved. The Venn diagram on its website indicates an aim to provide a single ecosystem stretching across PC, console, and mobile. Although PlaytronOS supports multiple storefronts, the company wants to improve discoverability for indie games with a community-curated "Playtron Select" showcase.

The team developing the OS has years of experience working with Google, Amazon, Sony, Samsung, Meta, and numerous other companies. Furthermore, the company plans to tap the Linux community extensively through hiring and community tools.

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I appreciate the optimism and enthusiasm but guys, I would hardly call this a New OS just get real: You're building a Linux Distro. You're joining the thousands of available Linux distros and if I had to guess you'll make it either an Arch, Ubuntu or Fedora fork to have 90% of the work done for you by those distros and 9% of the rest of the work done for you by Valve and Proton.

Not that the extra 1% can make it really popular and well supported and working great out of the box but let's not over-sell this as 'A new OS' and just use a more honest quick rule of thumb: If you're not building key parts of the OS like the Kernel or most of the drivers from scratch you're not really making an OS, you're making a distro which can be done by basically anyone even just mildly familiar with Linux.
 
Hmmm - I wonder if starting to create endless distros of proton-based-gaming-OS's is really what Linux needs right now. The blessing and curse of open source software - so many choices - too many choices.
 
Wouldn't be better to talk to Steam and use their flavour of Arch? They could provide required, handheld-oriented drivers/kernel modules and be happy with it.
And slap any DE on top of that they would want (gamescope do not care anyway).

That is just a scam to get investors. I wonder if they will contribute anything upstream.
 
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