Playtron has entered the portable gaming scene with itsannouncementof a self-titled Linux OS, PlaytronOS and eventually a Playtron handheld. Playtron is backed by $10 million in funding and has 18 employees. Concept art for the handheld was originally provided toThe Vergefor its extended, exclusive coverage of the announcement. In the face of the ongoing success ofSteam Deck(OLED),Linux gamingin general, and the ever-increasing number ofhandheld gaming PCs,it seems Playtron is determined to shake up the market.

PlaytronOS is claimed to run on all of the current drop of gaming handhelds, so you could install it on yourSteam Deck,Asus ROG Allyor even theLenovo Legion Go. But Playtron specific hardware is on the cards for later this year.Will it be successful, though? Let’s go over the established names connected to this SteamOS alternative (and eventual Deck competitor, the date for the handheld on the site is 2025) before we start earnestly assessing PlaytronOS for what it is.

Playtron

Confirmed Playtron Members and Industry Connections

According to Playtron’sofficial website, PlaytronOS is a “Linux-based gaming OS compatible with every game store and many 3rd party integrations to come.” The same site describes SteamOS as “Linux-based game OS compatible with Steam only. Locked to the Valveverse.”

These statements about SteamOS and Deck are where we hit a gray area. Running the Steam Deck with Steam OS and the Steam store is undoubtedly howValvewould like gamers to experience the Steam Deck. While Gaming Mode only officially supports the Steam storefront, with a little tweaking, games from other storefronts can be played in Desktop Mode and Gaming Mode with the right configuration. In fact, the touted involvement of Heroic Games Launcher is notable here because its main purpose is getting non-Steam game launchers to work on Linux.

Christopher Harper

That said, this doesn’t make a project like PlaytronOS pointless. While it’s true Steam Deck supports other launchers, you’ll still need to do a lot of Desktop Mode setup to get their games working, compared to seamless Steam Store game installs.

PlaytronOS will be removing Desktop Mode from the equation entirely, and (apparently) support all the major PC storefronts right after installing. PlaytronOS is being targeted at a “core-casual” audience that wouldn’t want to deal with that hassle, and Playtron is even partnering withPerplexityfor AI-driven tips for gamers who get stuck.

Another compelling feature of PlaytronOS besides simplifying the experience for multi-launcher Linux gamers is support for ARM architecture with x86 emulation for games. By bringing ptitSeb into the equation, future and existing ARM handheld devices suddenlylook a lot more viable for Linux gamingthrough PlaytronOS.

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There are also claims that PlaytronOS may have better anti-cheat implementations than SteamOS thanks to using Fedora Silverblue Linux as a base, though these are a little dubious.

This meteoric announcement hasn’t come without criticism, either. While PlaytronOS is apparently “open-source”, device manufacturers are being called to pay a $10 royalty for installing PlaytronOS on a given device. Playtron was quoted as undecided “justhowopen source it’ll be” while also releasing a public alpha in hopes of getting lots of (free) testing from the Linux community.

In the FOSS (Free and Open Source Software) community, that could be viewed as an underhanded move, particularly if PlaytronOS itself eventually gets paywalled. Though considering the existence of ChimeraOS and other SteamOS alternatives, likeHoloISOorBazzite, that would also be very unwise without lots of hardware manufacturers backing Playtron.

Christopher Harper has been a successful freelance tech writer specializing in PC hardware and gaming since 2015, and ghostwrote for various B2B clients in High School before that. Outside of work, Christopher is best known to friends and rivals as an active competitive player in various eSports (particularly fighting games and arena shooters) and a purveyor of music ranging from Jimi Hendrix to Killer Mike to the Sonic Adventure 2 soundtrack.