The Steam Deck now officially supports most of Capcom's recent library of Steam games after Valve continues its drive to certify as many of its 50,000+ library of games as possible. The latest additions from Capcom bring the total to 242 for games that are "Steam Deck Verified," with a further 170 that are considered playable. Only 47 games have so far been stated to categorically not work with the handheld device, though that may change in the future.
The new Capcom games joining the growing list of Certified games includes Resident Evil Village, Resident Evil 2, and Devil May Cry 5, with some expectation that the other Resident Evil games will follow suit shortly -- it's just a question of whether any anti-cheat or DRM software that they're currently using might get in the way of the Linux platform on the Steam Deck.
Valve's portable gaming PC is already proving exceedingly popular, with great performance, solid battery life, and a wide range of input options which makes it compatible with a wide range of games from differing genres; including those that don't always play well on a typical gaming PC setup with a keyboard and mouse, like driving and fighting games.
With the console launching on February 25, Valve has been running at a pace to get as many games certified or verified playable as possible. It isn't likely to hit the 50,000 milestone before then, but it looks set to get most of the 1,000 most popular games certified one way or the other before long.