GPD Win 2:
the_importer: -It overheated with basic 3D games and turned-off because of it...
-...due to the fact that it uses a power hungry Intel CPU
Does AMD run cooler (user much less power)?
That is generally the problem I see with x86 (Intel or AMD, doesn't matter) based mobile/portable devices that are supposed to be used primarily or only with battery power. There's a reason Apple M1 laptops, or any Android tablets, have so much longer battery life than even the lowest end x86 based (Windows) laptops...
So I personally would prefer my battery-based mobile devices to have more power-efficient CPUs (like based on ARM), but then of course they aren't hardware compatible with my PC games, like GPD Win 2 and Steam Deck are...
With my (gaming) laptops, I don't care as much about the power usage (other than by the heat production, ie. does the laptop run cool enough) because I mostly use them only when they are connected to power, ESPECIALLY if I intend to play games on them. I use them on battery only in exceptional cases, like I am somewhere outside my home or office and get a call from work that I need to check up on something on some server... then I naturally use battery power, and I don't do power hungry stuff anyway as I need only a remote desktop or ssh connection to somewhere from that laptop, and that's it. As long as the battery lasts one or two hours with such light use, it is fine (for my laptop).
the_importer: -The battery barely lasted a year before dying within 30 minutes just by surfing the web on it
The main thing I want to know with battery-based devices is: can I replace the battery myself, with third-party batteries?
Unfortunately many device manufacturers try to make that harder or even make it practically impossible, both by making opening the device (and hence access the battery) quite hard, and/or adding electronics/firmware that will not accept third-party battery cells changed by the user (e.g. the new battery refuses to recharge due to that). That way they make sure you at least have to send it to their official repair for a battery replacement, or scrap the device and buy a new one.
I recently had to research on that when considering replacing the battery on e.g. my Bose Soundlink Mini 2 bluetooth speaker, or some older Dell laptop.
I like how effortless that is on e.g. the wireless 8bitdo Pro+ gamepads. The battery packs are easily reachable and replaceable by the user, and in fact the user can even use a couple of AA batteries instead of the battery pack (naturally that is not possible on more power-hungry devices like laptops etc., but just goes to show that 8bitdo was not designed to artificially force the user to buy and use only official 8bitdo batteries, and/or send their gamepads to official 8bitdo repair centers to get their battery replaced).
We need more honest and customer-friendly companies like 8bitdo!
So I guess my main question was, for both GPD Win 2/3 and Steam Deck: can the user change the battery themselves, even with non-official (= cheaper) third-party battery cells? You have to remember that the batteries WILL die at some point, and need to be replaced.
Orkhepaj: 1 year for battery... thats bad
You can never know for sure. My wife's Honor 10 (in my eyes an expensive high-end phone) battery just got broken and swollen after a couple of years. It got swollen during recharge so it basically broke the whole phone as the swollen battery "expanded" the whole phone out of its frames. I didn't feel it made sense to try to fix the phone anymore, as the swollen battery probably physically broke something else in the phone, besides the battery itself.
It helps if the battery can be easily replaced by the user, also with third-party battery cells. With some mobile devices it is not an issue, with many it is, making it seem that the manufacturer is trying to prevent the user from doing just that.