Skip to main content

Refurbished Steam Decks are now official — here’s how to buy one

Steam Deck sitting on a pink background.
Jacob Roach / Digital Trends

After product pages went live early, Valve has officially opened up orders for “certified refurbished” Steam Decks. All three capacities Valve offers are available to purchase, and there are some hefty discounts over list price:

  • 64GB model — $319 (down from $399)
  • 256GB model — $419 (down from $549)
  • 512GB model — $519 (down from $649)

Eagle-eyed viewers will probably spot that these prices match the recent drops the Steam Deck saw during the Steam Summer Sale. These will be available outside of sales, however, and it’s possible they’ll eventually see a discount, as well.

Recommended Videos

For Valve, a “certified refurbished” Steam Deck must “meet or even exceed the performance standards of new retail units.” However, Valve points out that the devices may have minor cosmetic blemishes. The devices still go through a complete factory reset, software update, and gauntlet of over 100 tests before being put up for sale.

Get your weekly teardown of the tech behind PC gaming
Check your inbox!

Valve says refurbished models come with the same one year warranty as a new Steam Deck, and they come with a carrying case, quick start guide, and refurbished power supply. This power supply, like the Steam Deck itself, has been fully tested but may include minor cosmetic marks. Presumably, the carrying case is brand new, but Valve hasn’t clarified if that’s the case or not.

The Steam Deck is now over a year old, and the company has likely built up quite an inventory of returns and repair requests, so it’s not surprising to see refurbished models. The performance is also starting to slip in some cases, especially as challengers like the Asus ROG Ally and Ayaneo 2S promise higher frame rates (though at a much higher price).

Although the performance doesn’t always top charts, the Steam Deck has shaped up surprisingly well over the past year. As you can read in our Asus ROG Ally versus Steam Deck comparison, the Deck still provides solid performance at its native resolution and a much better software suite.

In addition, new games are continuing to join the Deck Verified list. Baldur’s Gate 3 is the most recent example of a major release receiving Steam Deck verification, and FromSoftware has confirmed the upcoming Armored Core VI will be “fully supported” on Steam Deck.

Jacob Roach
Lead Reporter, PC Hardware
Jacob Roach is the lead reporter for PC hardware at Digital Trends. In addition to covering the latest PC components, from…
EmuDeck is slowly taking over my PC gaming setup
EmuDeck running on a Windows PC.

I was once like you. I thought EmuDeck was just a quick and easy way to set up emulators on my Steam Deck, and despite using it for years, I never thought more of it than that. But slowly over the past few months, EmuDeck has become one of the most essential apps I have installed on my gaming PC.

EmuDeck showed up on the scene in 2022, originally built as a "collection of scripts that allows you to autoconfigure your Steam Deck" for emulation. It will install your emulators, configure them, create directories for your games, and hook into apps like Steam ROM Manager so you can see all of your emulated games in your Steam Deck library. It's been an essential tool for retro and emulation enthusiasts since release, but EmuDeck has grown into something much more powerful -- and it's not slowing down.
Always humble beginnings

Read more
I didn’t think I needed a modular keypad — until I tried this one
The Cooler Master MasterHub with various modules.

I've dabbled in streaming in the past, but I am definitely not a streamer. I play my games alone, with a little music turned on in the background and plenty of volume to get me immersed. So, devices like the wildly popular Elgato Stream Deck never appealed to me.

I could see the utility of having dedicated buttons for productivity purposes, but I couldn't justify actually spending money on a device. But then Cooler Master's Stream Deck competitor, the MasterHub, showed up on my doorstep.

Read more
AMD’s Z2 Extreme chip is coming in early 2025
Ghost of Tsushima running on the Asus ROG Ally X.

AMD is working on the Z2 Extreme, and it's set to show up in early 2025. In a joint Q&A session between AMD and Microsoft attended by Digital Trends, AMD revealed that it's targeting an "early 2025" release for the Z2 Extreme. It's one of the larger announcements to come out of IFA 2024, which has already revealed surprises for handheld gaming PCs like the new Acer Nitro Blaze 7.

Most of the best handheld gaming PCs currently use AMD's Ryzen Z1 Extreme chip. That's true of the Lenovo Legion Go all the way to the recent Asus ROG Ally X. A refresh early next year would likely prompt a wave of new devices that leverage the new chip for higher performance and better battery life.

Read more