I don't get this. Why does it matter if it's a console or not???
As long as it's built to be connected to a TV and can play the games you've bought on Xbox and also play games you've bought on Steam and freeloaded from Epic etc - What's the actual problem?
The day I docked a Steam Deck to the TV I started drifting away from the usual consoles.
+ It felt like a console but wasn't restricted like a console.
- The only problem was the performance.
Then I built a PC for the living room to not be limited by power, booted it into Steam BPM.
+ It felt like a console, was silent like a console, was more powerful than a console, had access to more content than a console.
- The only problem was that dealing with outer launchers and browsing Gamepass was a hurdle.
Then I swapped to boot into Playnite. Upgraded the graphics card because I could. This is where I'm at now.
+ It feels like a console, is more silent than a console, more powerful than probably all the next gen consoles, I have easy access to all launchers libraries for browsing and installing and playing, including Gamepass.
- The only problem is that I can't access my old console games.
The last bit will supposedly be fixed with Helix, at least for the Xbox library, the PlayStation library is kinda lost I guess.
And I really couldn't care less if it's defined as a console or PC or car or hamburger.
Why is that so important so it's always a talking point around this device? I don't get it