Can’t say for sure (there’s always a chance some mod or other is horifically optimized) but these look like they’d be fine. Skyrim was originally designed for 0.5GB of ram and SE for 8GB (PS4/XOne), the steam deck has 16GB unified memory so you’ve got headroom to add extra textures/objects npcs to the loaded space. I remember playing a lightly modded FNV run on the deck at solid 60fps, also some unmodded F4 at 40-60fps depending.
The real issue you’re going to have is using a mod manager through a translation layer like WINE - there’s easy installers available, but there’s still a layer of finicky-ness to them. Once you’ve got it set up right though, it’s just one more click (or tap) to get to the game. On that note - while it’s possible to use the touchscreen to install mods, I wouldn’t recommend it :P
Can’t say for sure (there’s always a chance some mod or other is horifically optimized) but these look like they’d be fine. Skyrim was originally designed for 0.5GB of ram and SE for 8GB (PS4/XOne), the steam deck has 16GB unified memory so you’ve got headroom to add extra textures/objects npcs to the loaded space. I remember playing a lightly modded FNV run on the deck at solid 60fps, also some unmodded F4 at 40-60fps depending.
The real issue you’re going to have is using a mod manager through a translation layer like WINE - there’s easy installers available, but there’s still a layer of finicky-ness to them. Once you’ve got it set up right though, it’s just one more click (or tap) to get to the game. On that note - while it’s possible to use the touchscreen to install mods, I wouldn’t recommend it :P