Valve has announced a new Steam Machine and controller, designed to bring PC gaming into the living room. The Steam Machine is a custom-built cube with an AMD Zen 4 CPU and RDNA3 GPU, housed in a sleek black design with customizable LED lighting. It will have roughly the same horsepower as a mid-range desktop gaming PC from a few years ago.
The machine will run on SteamOS, a Linux-based operating system optimized for gaming, which offers fast suspend/resume features, easy access to cloud saves, and compatibility with most Windows games via Proton. This feature was improved in recent versions of SteamOS, allowing for better in-game performance than Windows on some games and hardware.
The new controller is designed to be more standardized than previous Valve controllers, featuring thumbsticks, a d-pad, face buttons, shoulder buttons, and four programmable grip buttons. It will have magnetic TMR thumbstick sensors, six-axis IMU for gyro-based tilt controls, and a grip sensor for ensuring control turn off when the controller is put down or picked up.
The Steam Machine and controller are set to launch in early 2026, with no pricing details announced yet. The new hardware aims to simplify PC gaming on the living room TV, but its success will depend on how it compares to existing options like third-party USB-C docks.
The machine will run on SteamOS, a Linux-based operating system optimized for gaming, which offers fast suspend/resume features, easy access to cloud saves, and compatibility with most Windows games via Proton. This feature was improved in recent versions of SteamOS, allowing for better in-game performance than Windows on some games and hardware.
The new controller is designed to be more standardized than previous Valve controllers, featuring thumbsticks, a d-pad, face buttons, shoulder buttons, and four programmable grip buttons. It will have magnetic TMR thumbstick sensors, six-axis IMU for gyro-based tilt controls, and a grip sensor for ensuring control turn off when the controller is put down or picked up.
The Steam Machine and controller are set to launch in early 2026, with no pricing details announced yet. The new hardware aims to simplify PC gaming on the living room TV, but its success will depend on how it compares to existing options like third-party USB-C docks.