Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. News

Valve’s Steam Machine could cost you PC money, not console money

Valve’s console-style PC aims to be like a gaming PC so you might pay PC-like money.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Valve Branding on the Steam Machine
Valve

What’s happened? One of the biggest questions surrounding the Steam Machine has been its price, especially since it’s meant to feel “console-like” at a time when PC component costs, including RAM, are climbing. Valve has finally offered some clarity. Speaking on Skill Up’s Friends Per Second podcast, Valve hardware director Pierre-Loup Griffais confirmed that the Steam Machine won’t follow the traditional console model of selling hardware at a loss. Instead, it will be priced in line with a PC that offers similar performance. The idea is to prioritise power and build quality rather than chase a lower entry price. That said, Valve still hasn’t shared the exact figures.

  • Valve emphasises it will not take a loss on hardware to hit a lower price point.
  • The company says the Steam Machine will sit “in the price window of a PC with similar parts,” rather than console pricing.
  • Analysts estimate pricing to fall in the mid-$500 to $1000 range, depending on specs and configuration.
  • Valve also noted that fluctuating component costs make final price decisions difficult right now.

Why this is important: If Valve prices the Steam Machine like a proper PC, it immediately sets a different expectation for buyers. Let’s be real, you’re paying PC-level money, not subsidised console pricing. That places the device in a unique spot compared to PlayStation or Xbox, with fewer cost-cutting shortcuts and potentially more room for higher-end features.

Recommended Videos

For existing PC gamers, this feels familiar and even reassuring, but console-focused players may face a bit of sticker shock. The move also signals how Valve plans to manage hardware margins and reinforce its ecosystem, suggesting a long-term strategy where performance, platform control, and revenue stay tightly aligned.

Why should I care? If you’re planning to buy the Steam Machine or consider it alongside a gaming PC or console, this shift is directly relevant. On the upside, you may gain a device built with premium components, a small form factor, high specs, and unmistakably PC-class power. All that combined means better performance, future-proofing, and possibly fewer compromises. On the downside, you might pay significantly more than a console, and the value proposition depends heavily on how much you use PC-style games, peripherals, and customisation.

The absence of hardware subsidies means Valve may skip entry-level pricing, reducing budget options. Then again, considering the base variant does come with a 512GB SSD, it could be more affordable. Nonetheless, if you’re more of a casual gamer or primarily play console titles, you might find other systems a better value. However, if you already own PC gear, peripheral setups, and care about versatility, the Steam Machine may be a smart future-proof choice.

Okay, so what’s next? As things stand, one still needs to wait for Valve to officially price details and launch dates. They’ve indicated an early 2026 window, but exact timing is still fluid. Once the pricing and performance reviews are out, only then can we compare the Steam Machine’s price-to-performance versus building or buying a similar PC — that will be the litmus test for its value.

Varun Mirchandani
Varun is an experienced technology journalist and editor with over eight years in consumer tech media. His work spans…
Is Rust cross-platform?
Yes, but there's levels to this.
Rust player running by buildings.

Rust is the kind of survival game where choosing the right server matters almost as much as choosing the right weapon. This also reflects on the platform of your choice. If you're you're friends are spread across PC, PlayStation, and Xbox, you’ll want to know exactly who can play together before anyone starts building a base.

The answer to the question is simple in one way and annoying in another. Rust supports crossplay between PlayStation and Xbox players, but PC players cannot play with console players. So yes, there is cross-platform support, but only inside the console version of the game.

Read more
Is Overcooked 2 cross-platform?
Cross-play on Overcooked 2 exists, but the answer is a bit complicated.
A map of Overcooked with enhanced graphics for the PS5 and Xbox Series X

Overcooked 2 is a great game to play with friends, provided everyone is ready for the shouting that comes with it. One person is trying to chop vegetables, another is panicking over burning rice, and someone else has probably fallen off the edge of the map with the only clean plate.

Naturally, it works best when the whole group can jump in together. But that gets a little confusing if your friends are spread across PlayStation, Xbox, Nintendo Switch, and PC. Overcooked 2 has been released on several platforms, but cross-platform support depends heavily on which version of the game you’re playing.

Read more
As Steam Deck fires up handheld costs, Acer Nitro Blaze Link limits you to stream at just $180
Computer, Electronics, Laptop

Gaming handhelds have become surprisingly expensive. Between premium models like the Steam Deck, ASUS ROG Ally, and Lenovo Legion Go, getting a portable gaming machine often means spending hundreds of dollars before you’ve even bought a game.

Acer’s latest idea takes a very different approach. Announced alongside a flood of new products, the Nitro Blaze Link is a handheld gaming device that doesn’t actually run games itself. Instead, it streams them from a compatible gaming laptop, turning your Predator or Nitro notebook into a personal gaming server. If that sounds familiar, that’s because the concept isn’t entirely new. Tools like Steam Link, Moonlight, and Parsec have been doing similar things for years. What Acer is betting on is convenience.

Read more