
Valve got tons of folks excited about its new Steam Machine, catering to gamers who want a familiar library and experience stuffed into a console that was supposed to release in 2025. Well, that reality might be farther off than expected.
It was said in passing, taking up just one small paragraph of many in a substantial “Year in review” post by Steam on its official community website (via The Verge). According to that short tidbit, Valve seems to be less sure it can produce the Steam Machine and deliver it to users this year.
This is what Valve wrote:
Here’s the lineup of hardware we announced in 2025. We hope to ship in 2026, but as we shared recently, memory and storage shortages have created challenges for us. We’ll share updates publicly when we finalize our plans!
It may not be a lot to read into, but it sounds like recent material constraints are putting more pressure on Valve than originally thought. The way the release phrases things, it sounds like a 2027 release is on the table as a serious consideration.
In February, Valve noted that the Steam machine is still on track to be released in the first half of 2026. It also noted that pricing and timing were up in the air, but it gave users a little confidence that it may still happen soon. The latest update, however, abandons the notion of a release in Q1 or Q2 2026.
Valve still hasn’t confirmed pricing, which is another aspect that’s likely changing week to week behind the scenes. Not only are memory components scarce, but that drives the price up. As many of Valve’s customers know, PC RAM is at an all-time high, and one of the advantages of the Steam Machine was a way to get the PC experience without building an entire rig.
It may not all be doom and gloom, as the statement on Steam’s forum doesn’t entirely rule out a 2026 release; it just makes it seem unlikely. At the time of writing, Valve has made a comment in reply to The Verge.
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