Updated
Updated · Screen Rant · May 31
Valve Faces $1,000 Steam Machine Backlash as Leaks Flag Weak Specs and Tight Stock
Updated
Updated · Screen Rant · May 31

Valve Faces $1,000 Steam Machine Backlash as Leaks Flag Weak Specs and Tight Stock

2 articles · Updated · Screen Rant · May 31
  • $1,000-plus pricing for premium Steam Machine bundles is the biggest leak-driven concern, with gamers questioning why they would pay console-like money when PCs, PlayStation and Xbox offer clearer value.
  • Leaked hardware points to a semi-custom AMD Zen 4 6C/12T CPU, RDNA3 28-CU GPU, 16GB DDR5 RAM and 8GB GDDR6 VRAM—specs seen as too weak for many modern titles despite the high expected price.
  • Supply constraints in chips, RAM and NAND could force Valve to either trim features further or keep output low, raising fears of downgrades before launch.
  • Restricted sales are also worrying buyers: leaks say first-wave units will be sold through a locked reservation system, likely favoring long-standing Steam accounts and leaving missed buyers waiting months.
  • The concerns revive memories of the 2015 Steam Machine flop, as Valve prepares a second attempt to re-enter the console market with a refined SteamOS-based device.
Is the Steam Machine a true console rival or a strategic play to establish Valve's own gaming operating system?
Valve promises 4K performance, but can its hardware justify a PC price with potentially limiting console-like specs?