It sounds like bad news for those who want to get their hands on Valve’s upcoming new hardware. The company suggested Steam Machine, Steam Controller, and Steam Frame could all be delayed even further, potentially into 2027.
Valve announced all three products late last year, with the aim of releasing them at some point in the first quarter of 2026. In February, Valve signalled a delay was coming as a result of AI shortages that are causing PC hardware to spike in price. This had made it difficult for Valve to pin down a price and release date for the Steam Machine and Steam Frame. But at the time (early February), Valve still planned to release its hardware in the first half of this year.
Now, in a just published ‘Steam Year In Review 2025’ blog post, Valve said “we hope to ship in 2026,” which suggests we may have to wait until next year for the Steam Machine to come out. “As we shared recently, memory and storage shortages have created challenges for us,” Valve said. “We’ll share updates publicly when we finalize our plans!”
The Steam Machine is a mid-level gaming-focused PC designed to be more accessible than a standard desktop PC, with a sleek, cube-like design and SteamOS on-board. We here at IGN have offered our thoughts on how much the Steam Machine will cost, suggesting it’ll probably be higher than people think. Chatter about pricing ramped up last year when Linus Sebastian of Linus Tech Tips suggested it wouldn’t follow a “console pricing model” of $500, after he mentioned the figure in a meeting with Valve staff.
In an interview with Skill Up from last year, Valve’s Lawrence Yang and Pierre-Loup Griffais discussed the price of Steam Machine without actually confirming what it would be. The conversation began with software engineer Pierre-Loup Griffais confirming that Steam Machine is more powerful than 70% of gaming PCs that Valve registers on its hardware survey, in terms of general GPU level, saying: “We have looked at that number as part of speccing the machine, so it’s possible it’s evolved a little bit over time, but I think ballpark, it’s about there.”
He then said that fans should expect the Steam Machine price to be around the same as if you were to build a PC from parts to get “basically the same level of performance.”
“I think that if you build a PC from parts and get to basically the same level of performance, that’s the general price window that we aim to be at,” he said. “Ideally we’d be pretty competitive with that and have a pretty good deal, but we’re working on refining that as we speak. Right now is just a hard time to have a really good idea of what the price is going to be because there’s a lot of different things… a lot of external things.”




