I always go Box. Not sure how you swing, though.I wish they would hurry up and give us a price point/release date so I can decide to go Deck or Box.
what this guy saidif you care about all this nerd shit, the Steam Machine is not for you
I never understood the hoopla around the SM. The controller is the only exciting thing to me about it. A new Steam Deck would make my heart pump a lot faster.
I wish they would hurry up and give us a price point/release date so I can decide to go Deck or Box.
I don't personally want it, but I know some that do. I don't know how large the niche is, but there's enough gamers I've come across that want to enjoy PC gaming, but without the hassle of building one or dealing with drivers.
The idea of an entry point that's software managed by Valve, even extra incentive to not deal with Microsoft patching, but still getting the perks of PC gaming (like mods, no online subscription to play the game you already paid for, etc.) is enticing to some.
No shit. RAM-pocalypse and all that.
But IMO its not just the AI shitfest. Its the choice of hardware as well. If they aimed just 6 months later, they could be using the new Strix Halo SKU instead of garbage bin laptop parts from 2023.
Strix Halo? $2000 Steam Machine you nuts? Actually no. AMD saw pressures from Panther Lake coming, so they lined up cheaper Strix Halos for 2026: AI Max 388 (8x CPU, 40 CU GPU) and 392 (12x CPU, 40 CU GPU). Of the two, 388 would have been perfect for Steam Macine: Single CPU chiplet plus the I/O-GPU chiplet making it much cheaper than 3 chiplet AI Max+ 395.
Cost wise, think about these factors:
- Die size for 7540U (178mm²) and RX 7600M (204mm²) is bigger combined than AI Max 388 (379mm²).
- Dual chip and dual RAM type motherboard complexity vs single SoC and unified RAM pool (Valve engineers talked extensively about mobo layer complexity to accommodate GDDR6 on Gamers Nexus interview).
- Cooling needs are less costly (140W combined vs 120W). The cooling rig on Steam Machine is crazy with giant heat sink and crazy heat pipes for 2 separate chips. The overall box size could have been smaller to boot.
- PSU could shrink from 300W to 230W (GMKtec AI MAX 395 mini PC).
Even if all those factors even out with newer and more expensive SoC vs goodwill AMD laptop parts, the performance gains you get for similar price point is crazy:
- 7540U gets 2250 single thread and 8000 multi thread on Geekbench 6 while 388 gets 2500 and 14,000.
- RX 7600M gets 11,000 on Passmark GPU test while 8060S in 388 gets 18,000.
- 16GB DDR5 5400 gets you about 80ish GB/s, 8 GB of GDDR6 for 7600M gets you around 256GB/s, while 388 gets you 32GB of 256GB/s LPDDR5X.
- 24GB of RAM for Steam Machine makes Valve juggle 2 SO-DIMM slots and 2 GDDR6 chips soldered on mobo while you only have 4 soldered LPDDR5X 8000 chips on 388 mobo for 32GB.
If I was Valve, I would be kicking myself in the ass for rushing the Steam Machine by mere 6 months...
That would be 2nd half of 2027 for RDNA 5. We are stuck with RDNA 3.5 until then.It's weird because the Deck was made at the perfect time with the perfect AMD SoC.
Wereas here it looks like old AMD leftover from 2+ years ago. It should've used current zen+RDNA, or they should've waited till that was available.
They would certainly know how it barely keeps up with PS5. And they would certainly find out from nerds on YouTube and such how SM quite doesn't hack it for the price.Your analysis isn't wrong, but from a vibes standpoint, the kind of person the Steam Machine is aimed at really doesn't know or doesn't care about that kind of stuff.
Having money doesn't mean you are smart... just ask Microsoft.Valve isn't stupid. This is a multi-million, even multi-billion-dollar company. They will have thought this through before bringing a console to market, securing components in time at competitive prices rather than buying overpriced parts five minutes before release.
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They would certainly know how it barely keeps up with PS5. And they would certainly find out from nerds on YouTube and such how SM quite doesn't hack it for the price.
Luckily for them, everyone else is fucked, too.
If that it gets priced right, scalpers will scoop it up in droves, gut it of it's ram and try to make profit on only that.Could also be A BIG chance if they price it right. Many people would potentially grab a Machine rather than a way too expensive, even mid-range, gaming-pc
I read somewhere that Valve basically bought up "AMD's trash" to make these machines, they got a bargain in the process.Depends on when they bought the components. If they already had their RAM stocked up before the sudden price increase they will be putting themselves on the back for not waiting 6 months.
If that it gets priced right, scalpers will scoop it up in droves, gut it of it's ram and try to make profit on only that.
Unlikely they will launch them in different time frames. The entire marketing hinges of the eco-system of the Frame, Controller, Steam Deck. But yes, if nothing else I would gladly grab 3 Steam Controllers off the bat.I dont care about the steam machine just gimme the goddamn controller. I hope atleast thats coming in Q1
Valve failed hard in 2015. Granted they did not make the machines and most vendors dropped out. Valve can make mistakes and overestimate need/want just like any other company.I don't know how people come to such braindead conclusions. Valve has the most user hardware data of any company on this planet when it comes to what hardware their users have. If you think these specs were chosen out of the blue then you are either a) ignorant, b) shitposting, c) have no concept of hardware development, or d) all of the above.
People better jump on this deal as soon as they are made available for pre-order because the simple fact is the VAST majority of Valve users cannot hope to afford to upgrade their low to mid tier gaming systems. If you think ram is bad now wait until we hit Q3 of this year. 200% increase over Q3/Q4 25 and Q1 26 is nothing compared to reality that is heading our way this holiday season.
People are already grumbling about "deaths" in the pc hardware provider space before Q4 of this year.
This post summarizes my thoughts as well. I have absolutely no idea who this product is even for.As far as I'm concerned, the steam cube is a poor value proposition as a pc and as a console. It's really stuck in no mans land.
It has the following problems:
Realistically, this machine cannot run any of the major upcoming AAA games with any semblance of smooth performance. GTA 6, 007 First Light, high end UE5 games, etc..
- It's very weak as a pc and has specs not built for longevity
- It has no real upgrade path to improve performance unlike normal pc
- If we look at it as a console, the rumored prices don't offer the same cost efficiency as a console
- Very few developers if any will optimize directly for the steam cube losing the optimization efficiencies that enable console like longevity
- It's weaker than a ps5 that came out 5+ years ago.
- It has no support for FSR4 and we're currently not sure if it'll support XESS.
With these specs, I cannot even see the point of such a device. If you're putting out a valve machine, it should be future looking. Instead, valve chose cheap hardware that's already expired before it releases.
It's essentially using the Nintendo hardware philosophy except the problem is that Nintendo has exclusives that causes consumers to purchase the machine. Valve has no such exclusives.
Makes sense. These are low volume machines, they're not going to get any decent prices for the build, and it will be DOA if pricing is wrong. It makes sense to go back to the drawing board and wait out the market. It's not like they invested into a custom SOC or anything.
Deck wasn't scalped because Valve did it right. You need an account in a good state and only one unit per account. I could get mine without a problem back then.If that it gets priced right, scalpers will scoop it up in droves, gut it of it's ram and try to make profit on only that.
5070ti cards upwards of $900 USD now (if not more at nation wide retailers like best buy). I find it difficult to connect the failures (in your words) from 2015 to what Valve is doing now especially given the catastrophe facing the PC gaming industry currently.Valve failed hard in 2015. Granted they did not make the machines and most vendors dropped out. Valve can make mistakes and overestimate need/want just like any other company.
Thats not how capitalism works, if they launch gabecube they want more profits(not revenue, profits) so they will make sure price of that hardware is enough to cover all ram shortages, its not 2006 sony that was losing 200$ on each 599$ ps3.They should easily be able to keep their machine affordable from the 30% of everything they rake in.
Not saying they will fail necessarily, just that they can. I find humor in how I love Valve and taking the more negative approach and you have negative views on Gabe and think Valve is positioned to succeed. The irony is making my day!!! Pretty Funny!!!. Have a great Weekend!!!5070ti cards upwards of $900 USD now (if not more at nation wide retailers like best buy). I find it difficult to connect the failures (in your words) from 2015 to what Valve is doing now especially given the catastrophe facing the PC gaming industry currently.
If anything Valve is positioning themselves to be the only game in town when it comes to providing an affordable prebuilt pc rig that people (in this case people does NOT refer to all us neck beards with multiple 5090 cards) can pick up, connect to their living room TV, and start playing their steam library.
I am the first person in line with flaming pitchforks when it comes to Gaben...I think he is a super villain...but compared to the likes of samsung, nvidia, microsoft, and skyhinx...Value might be the only bulwark against a complete industry shift to "cloud first" gaming.
The only problem with this is it would lessen the perceived value of the "Steam Sales" (Valve's trump card). The big selling point becomes the free games not the cheap games. I don't think Valve wants that. (I don't believe you are referring to a sub). There are tons of free games on Steam of course, but they are not particularly highlighted, and the majority don't set the world on fire.Valve could practically lock in a win by making their Steam console the easiest place to start gaming. Bundle access to a curated, rotating library of titles with the device and make the value immediate: buy in, plug in, log in, and you already have great games waiting. No extra barrier to entry, like Sony and Nintendo locking multiplayer behind a paywall (valving out loud!). The more people who adopt the console, the more leverage Valve gains with developers looking for visibility on the platform.
Fuck shit up Valve!
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Any entry level PC/notebook can do it too without having to subsidize crowd who will be on your platform anywayValve could practically lock in a win by making their Steam console the easiest place to start gaming. Bundle access to a curated, rotating library of titles with the device and make the value immediate: buy in, plug in, log in, and you already have great games waiting. No extra barrier to entry, like Sony and Nintendo locking multiplayer behind a paywall (valving out loud!). The more people who adopt the console, the more leverage Valve gains with developers looking for visibility on the platform.
Any entry level PC/notebook can do it too without having to subsidize crowd who will be on your platform anyway
A lot of people just have a strong wish that someone else sell them things cheap even when it has zero business sense
Putting banner of sale on store main page with big font "-80%" is much cheaperIt wouldn't replace Steam sales, it would feed them. I'm not talking about new releases, just older titles. The bundled library would be a discovery hook: people can try games they missed, wishlist the sequels, buy during sales or grab sequals at laucnh, DLC's for the older titles, and newer entries. yada yada yada.
Any entry level PC/notebook can do it too without having to subsidize crowd who will be on your platform anyway
A lot of people just have a strong wish that someone else sell them things cheap even when it has zero business sense
It's sort of a Gamepass situation. I remember Phil touting that Gamepass subscribers bought more games than non-subscribers. Phil Please!!!It wouldn't replace Steam sales, it would feed them. I'm not talking about new releases, just older titles. The bundled library would be a discovery hook: people can try games they missed, wishlist the sequels, buy during sales or grab sequals at laucnh, DLC's for the older titles, and newer entries. yada yada yada.