Valve Announces New Hardware: Steam Machine, Controller, and New VR Headset
Following the relative success of the Steam Deck handheld, it looks like Valve is doubling down on its hardware business. The company announced a trifecta of devices yesterday: the Steam Machine, a cube-shaped gaming PC that’s also sort of a console, a new Steam Controller, and another VR headset, this one titled the Steam Frame. An exact release date hasn’t been announced yet, but the hardware is scheduled for early 2026. Pricing hasn’t been revealed yet, either.
When it comes to the Steam Machine, Valve boasts that it is six times more powerful than the Steam Deck and claims that it can handle 4K gaming at 60 FPS with AMD’s FSR image upscaling tech. It features a semi-custom AMD Zen 4 6C / 12T CPU and a semi-custom AMD RDNA3 GPU, 2.45GHz max sustained clock with 8GB GDDR6 VRAM. The AMD RDNA3 GPU means it’s part of the 7000 series, which began releasing in 2022. That said, it being a custom build means that it won’t be directly analogous to existing graphics cards. For RAM, it has 16GB DR5. As for storage, it will have two options: either a 512 GB hard drive or a 2TB SSD. The device will run on SteamOS. Honestly, it’s hard to make much of the specs without knowing the price and seeing some benchmark testing that shows how it runs some graphically-intensive games.
As for the Steam Controller, it has “high definition rumble” gyro control capabilities, four grip buttons on the back of the controller, a trackpad, and “next-generation magnetic thumbsticks.” It will charge and wirelessly connect to devices via the Steam Controller Puck, a little doohickey that connects to the Steam Machine via USB. It will also support Bluetooth and a wired connection.
Lastly, there’s the Steam Frame, Valve’s latest VR headset. Much like Meta’s Quest headsets, it will be a streaming-first device that allows you to play VR and non-VR games. The company claims it is lightweight and compact, doesn’t require wires, and provides a “high-quality streaming experience.” As for specs, the headset is a PC that also works standalone without streaming, running SteamOS with a Snapdragon 8 Series Processor and 16GB of RAM. It will come with motion-tracking Steam Frame Controllers as well.