Valve’s upcoming Steam Machine is a gaming PC for the living room
We certainly did not see this coming.
By Aaron Yip -
None of us saw this coming – certainly not Microsoft. In a surprise reveal to US media, Valve unveiled its latest and only its second Steam Machine, a console-style PC alongside a new controller and VR headset. All targeted for an early 2026 release in the US.
The move comes at a time when the industry is shifting hard: just weeks ago, rumours surrounding Microsoft next-generation Xbox suggested the company is preparing a hybrid console/PC platform – one that combines the plug-and-play ease of a console with the openness and upgradeability of a gaming PC.
Valve’s new Steam Machine is built upon its experience with the successful Steam Deck, but scaling it for the lounge-friendly TV experience. According to demos shown at its head office, the hardware uses a an AMD Zen 4 6-core CPU and an RDNA 3 class GPU, fitted into a compact cube chassis with console-style connectivity and microSD expansion for game libraries.
What makes this announcement intriguing to me is how it may reshape what we consider a “console”. If Valve’s Steam Machine truly delivers a seamless bridge between PC-style gaming and couch-based play, and if Microsoft’s next Xbox leans into PC hybridisation, the boundaries between console, PC and even handheld may blur further. That could mean fewer “which platform should I buy?” decisions, and more “which ecosystem do I want?” moments.
But there are key details missing with the Steam Machine. For one, Valve hasn’t revealed pricing or region-specific launch info (apart the US), and it remains to be seen how well optimised the hardware are for the SteamOS to allow gamers to run games smoothly on say, 4K?
I’m also curious to know what the decision makers at PlayStation make out of this announcement; would they continue to release their first-party franchises like Spider-Man, God of War and The Last of Us to a competing hardware that sits beside a PlayStation console? What I do know, is that the next two to three years will be interesting times for both PC and console gamers.