Valve has rolled out a much-requested quality-of-life upgrade for Steam Deck: the handheld can now keep downloading games and updates with the display turned off in a low-power mode, then automatically go to sleep once done.
The feature is live on the Beta and Preview channels and is designed to cut heat and power draw during long installs—without forcing players to leave the screen lit for hours.
Valve’s announcement spells out how it works. “Today we are adding a new feature to Steam Deck, enabling it to complete all active downloads in a new display-off low-power mode, before going to sleep.” It’s enabled by default when the handheld is plugged in, and there’s a manual toggle for the battery under Settings and Power. When a download is in progress, pressing the power button now brings up a prompt to continue in this new mode.
In this mode, waking the device briefly shows a status screen with progress before you choose to resume or let it keep going in the display-off state. For handheld owners juggling patches, the change removes a long-standing friction point. Instead of tethering the Steam Deck to a bright screen overnight, players can queue downloads, tap the power button, and let the hardware handle the rest, especially handy on the OLED model where heat management is a concern during sustained transfers.
Bottom line: Small switch, big win. Display-off downloads make the Steam Deck feel more console-like for the boring parts of PC gaming. Once this exits testing, there’s little reason to leave the screen blazing to finish a patch.
