![](/static/253f0d9b/assets/icons/icon-96x96.png)
![](https://sopuli.xyz/pictrs/image/8167d883-d9f5-4066-8ae7-80e8b3506722.webp)
This is the best summary I could come up with:
While every month Valve has been posting a fresh set of the most played Steam Deck games for the previous month, they’ve now added a dedicated Steam Chart for it.
Like the most played for May and again for April.
So you no longer have to wait for Valve to post about what’s currently hot, you can just go and see for yourself.
Like other Steam Charts you can filter it and with the Steam Deck chart it lets you view the most played games over the last week, month and year based on player counts.
For example, this is for the last week, and handily it shows the Deck Verified rating too:
While you’re here, why not hop on over to our Forum to talk about Your favourite game so far of 2024?
The original article contains 142 words, the summary contains 134 words. Saved 6%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
This is the best summary I could come up with:
The DRM Panic handler in Linux 6.10 that is used for presenting a visual error message in case of kernel panics and similar when CONFIG_VT is disabled continues seeing new features.
With Linux 6.11, the DRM Panic display can now handle monochrome logos.
With the code in Linux 6.10 when DRM Panic is triggered, an ASCII art version of Linux’s mascot, Tux the penguin, is rendered as part of the display.
If ASCII art on error messages doesn’t satisfy your tastes in 2024+, the DRM Panic code will be able to support a monochrome graphical logo that leverages the Linux kernel’s boot-up logo support.
This monochrome logo support in the DRM Panic handler was sent out as part of this week’s drm-misc-next pull request ahead of the Linux 6.11 merge window in July.
This week’s drm-misc-next material also includes TTM memory management improvements, various fixes to the smaller Direct Rendering Manager drivers, and also the previously talked about monochrome TV support for the Raspberry Pi.
The original article contains 237 words, the summary contains 165 words. Saved 30%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!