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Your Steam Machine delay is about parts, not plans

Valve says key components are tight, so timing and pricing are shifting.

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Valve

Valve says the Steam Machine delay is being driven by a parts squeeze, not a change in direction. The company says shortages in memory and storage are getting worse, and costs are rising right along with them.

That’s why you still don’t have the two details that matter most, a price and a ship date. Valve says it had planned to share both, but it’s revisiting launch timing and pricing because the supply situation keeps shifting, especially for Steam Machine and Steam Frame.

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Valve is still holding to a broad window. It expects three new products to ship in the first half of the year. Exact dates aren’t set though.

The bottleneck is memory and storage

Valve calls out memory and storage as the tightest categories, and that’s the heart of the delay. When those parts fluctuate, final configurations and costs can shift late in the process.

This also explains why the rollout may not look uniform. Steam Machines are built by multiple hardware partners, so one model can move faster if its parts are secured, while another stalls if it is chasing the same constrained components.

Valve says Steam Frame is among the most affected too. That hints the same bottlenecks are shared across more than one device line.

What it means for your purchase

If you’re waiting to decide, the uncertainty is the point. Without stable supply and pricing, any early promise can turn into a mistake for both the buyer and the builder. Nobody wants that.

There’s also a value risk. When memory and storage prices jump, partners may adjust specs to hit a target, or raise prices to keep the build intact. Either way, what you expected to buy can change, not just when it arrives.

Valve still hasn’t shared final pricing, specific dates, or which regions will see stock first.

What to watch next

The next update that matters is simple, pricing and availability that stick. Until Valve can publish those details, assume the first wave could be limited and uneven.

If you want a particular model, be ready to compare configurations quickly once partner listings go live. Check storage, memory, and included accessories, then decide fast once the numbers are real.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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