Blog
The New Steam Machine — Specs, History & Who Should Buy It in 2026
Valve’s living room gaming dream is back. Smaller than a PlayStation 5, more powerful than the Steam Deck and finally backed by years of SteamOS evolution, Proton compatibility and real hardware experience.
The Console That Refuses To Die
Back in 2015, Valve attempted to change gaming forever with the original Steam Machine. The vision sounded incredible on paper: PC gaming power in a console-style box sitting neatly beneath your television.
The execution, however, was chaotic. Hardware partners flooded the market with wildly different systems, Linux gaming support was practically non-existent and the Steam Controller looked like something designed in an alternate universe.
Yet despite its spectacular collapse, Valve quietly built the foundations for a second attempt. Proton compatibility changed Linux gaming forever. SteamOS matured into a genuinely polished operating system. Then the Steam Deck arrived and proved millions of players actually wanted Valve hardware.
Now, in 2026, Valve is trying again — and this time the conditions finally make sense.

A Brief & Brutal History Of Steam Machines
2012 — 2013
Valve grows concerned about Microsoft’s Windows Store ambitions and begins exploring a Linux-based gaming ecosystem. The internet dubs it the “Steam Box”.
2015
Steam Machines officially launch with over a dozen hardware partners. Linux support is weak, pricing is confusing and Windows 10 neutralises Valve’s fears almost overnight.
2018
Valve launches Proton compatibility. Suddenly thousands of Windows games begin working on Linux with minimal developer effort.
2022
The Steam Deck launches and becomes one of the most beloved handheld gaming devices ever made.
November 2025
Valve officially reveals the new Steam Machine alongside a redesigned Steam Controller and Steam Frame VR headset.
2026
Launch delays caused by global memory shortages push release windows back, but Valve confirms the project remains fully active.
Steam Machine 2026 (Rumored) Specifications
⚡ Processor
Semi-custom AMD Zen 4
6 cores / 12 threads
Up to 4.8GHz boost
🎮 Graphics
AMD RDNA 3 GPU
28 compute units
RTX 4060-tier performance
💾 Memory & Storage
16GB DDR5 RAM
512GB or 2TB NVMe SSD
Expandable storage support
📺 Gaming Performance
4K gaming with FSR
Ray tracing support
1080p / 1440p native gaming
Valve claims the new Steam Machine is around six times more powerful than the Steam Deck, while maintaining a remarkably efficient 30W TDP design.
Crucially, every Steam Deck Verified game automatically carries Steam Machine Verified status, meaning thousands of titles are ready to play immediately.
The Cube Design & Customisation
The new Steam Machine is tiny. At just 156 × 162mm, it occupies roughly half the space of an Xbox Series X while delivering genuinely impressive gaming performance.
Valve also leaned heavily into customisation. The front magnetic faceplate can be swapped in seconds, opening the door for custom community designs, RGB integrations and even live performance monitoring displays.
17
RGB LEDs built into the base unit
4K
Target gaming output with FSR enabled
35h
Steam Controller battery life
The Big Question — Price
Valve still has not officially confirmed pricing. That uncertainty matters.
Current industry estimates place the 512GB model somewhere between £500 and £650, depending on storage availability and global memory pricing.
Unlike PlayStation or Xbox, Valve is not subsidising this hardware like a traditional console. The Steam Machine is effectively a compact gaming PC, and pricing reflects that reality.
Who Should Actually Buy One?
✅ Steam Library Owners
If you already own hundreds of Steam games and want a living room setup without building a gaming PC, this is exactly who Valve built it for.
✅ Console Gamers Curious About PC Gaming
This is the easiest PC gaming has ever been. Plug it into your TV, sign into Steam and start playing.
⚠️ Mid-Range PC Owners
If your existing gaming PC already handles modern games comfortably, the Steam Machine is more about convenience than raw performance.
❌ Competitive Mouse & Keyboard Players
For ultra-high refresh esports gaming, a dedicated desktop PC still makes more sense.
Why 2026 Feels Different
The original Steam Machine failed because the ecosystem simply was not ready. Linux gaming barely existed, GPU upscaling technology was immature and Valve lacked any real hardware experience.
In 2026, those problems are largely solved.
Proton compatibility means thousands of Windows games now work flawlessly on Linux. SteamOS has matured into a polished console-like operating system. The Steam Deck proved gamers genuinely trust Valve hardware.
More importantly, there is now a genuine audience for PC gaming in the living room.
The Bottom Line
The Steam Machine is still unreleased in the UK as of 19 May 2026. Pricing remains uncertain and launch timing is still shifting due to component shortages.
But this no longer feels like an experimental side project.
Valve finally has the ecosystem, software maturity and hardware experience needed to make this concept work properly. Whether it becomes the future of living room PC gaming remains to be seen — but for the first time in over a decade, the Steam Machine actually looks ready for the fight.

