Valve has confirmed its upcoming Steam Machine console will not receive hardware subsidies, distinguishing it from traditional PlayStation and Xbox pricing models. Software Engineer Pierre-Loup Griffais told the media that pricing will align with standard PC market rates rather than following the loss-leader approach used by Sony and Microsoft.
Industry observers anticipate the device could reach between $800 and $900, particularly with potential memory cost increases. That figure significantly exceeds the PlayStation 5 Digital Edition, currently available at $399, despite the older console reportedly delivering superior performance. Hardware Engineer Yazan Aldehayyat previously described pricing as competitive with self-built PC configurations.
The Steam Machine features a semi-custom AMD Zen 4 processor with six cores, RDNA3 graphics containing 28 compute units, 16 gigabytes of DDR5 memory paired with 8 gigabytes of video memory, and storage options at either 512 gigabytes or 2 terabytes. The compact system runs SteamOS 3 with desktop environment support.
Industry observers anticipate the device could reach between $800 and $900, particularly with potential memory cost increases. That figure significantly exceeds the PlayStation 5 Digital Edition, currently available at $399, despite the older console reportedly delivering superior performance. Hardware Engineer Yazan Aldehayyat previously described pricing as competitive with self-built PC configurations.
The Steam Machine features a semi-custom AMD Zen 4 processor with six cores, RDNA3 graphics containing 28 compute units, 16 gigabytes of DDR5 memory paired with 8 gigabytes of video memory, and storage options at either 512 gigabytes or 2 terabytes. The compact system runs SteamOS 3 with desktop environment support.