Steam Deck replacement parts spotted – and prices are a pleasant surprise
Although the motherboard is a (predictably) costly part from iFixit
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
We’ve caught a glimpse of spare parts for theSteam Deckgoing on sale, but it turns out that iFixit jumped the gun in sending these retail listings live, and they’ve been yanked down – though presumably it won’t be long before the relevant bits of kit will be available again.
You may recall thatiFixit cooked up a deal with Valve to be the official supplierof replacement parts for theSteamDeck, and as the company tweeted to clarify, it mistakenly published these product pages, complete with pricing.
Earlier today we published some pages related to our upcoming parts launch with Valve. These went live earlier than we planned, so we ended up taking them down. If you did get a parts order in, we’ll honor it. 💙 Stay tuned for the real launch soon!May 21, 2022
Assuming that these are the correct prices, and not placeholders – on what were apparently ‘test’ pages, according to an iFixit rep onReddit– the price tags for various parts were revealed asGaming On Linuxspotted, and many are pleasingly reasonable.
A replacement screen runs to $100 or £90 for the top-end anti-glare display (and $65 or £60 for the basic screen), with a new fan costing $25 or £20.
Most of the prices seem nicely pitched on the affordable side, but if you want a new motherboard, you’re looking at a substantial $350 or £290 outlay. That’s not far off the cost of a new Steam Deck, of course, which runs to $399 or £349 for the entry-level model.
Analysis: An immediate rush on fans…
Do note that iFixit made it clear that some orders were placed before the listings were removed, and anybody who got an order in will have it honored.
As you might imagine, there were a number of people who bought replacement fans – there have beencomplaints about some overly noisy models blighted by a high-pitched whine– and in fact the fans sold out before the listings were actually taken down, going by reports online. (Valve is addressing this particular gremlin in the works, or is trying to,with beta software updates, mind you.)
Get the best Black Friday deals direct to your inbox, plus news, reviews, and more.
Sign up to be the first to know about unmissable Black Friday deals on top tech, plus get all your favorite TechRadar content.
Some other folks are looking at the array of parts which were available and speculating about being able to buy all the components needed to make their own Steam Deck – but doubtless that’s going to work out expensive, even if theoretically possible (which we don’t know yet).
More realistically, there may be Deck owners out there who are looking not just to perform basic repairs on a wonky thumbstick, or maybe a problematic fan, but perhaps upgrade a lesser model Steam Deck to the better screen on the top-end version. And seeing the price of the replacement display will likely be heartening to anyone with enough techie chops to be able to open up their device and switch out the screen.
ViaTom’s Hardware
Darren is a freelancer writing news and features for TechRadar (and occasionally T3) across a broad range of computing topics including CPUs, GPUs, various other hardware, VPNs, antivirus and more. He has written about tech for the best part of three decades, and writes books in his spare time (his debut novel - ‘I Know What You Did Last Supper’ - was published by Hachette UK in 2013).
Valve is bringing much more than an “incrementally better” update to the Steam Deck - here’s what we know about the handheld’s huge tech upgrade
Amazon Prime member? Then hurry and download these 40+ free games on your Steam Deck
I’ve used Genmoji and now I’m convinced Apple Intelligence will be a huge success