The Steam Machine's announcement landed poorly due to its over $1,000 cost, despite Valve's efforts to explain why it's priced well above a standard console. On the positive side, though, it seems that we have Steam Machines at home.
Valve's Pierre-Loup Griffais told The Verge that users will be able to build a custom Steam Machine using SteamOS. "Starting with the SteamOS 3.8 release, you can put together your own Steam Machine using whatever PC parts you want." While he did not provide specific timeframes, Griffais also said that Valve is actively working on NVIDIA driver support for SteamOS.
SteamOS 3.8.10 was released just last week. In Valve's Steam Machine FAQ, the company addresses the question "If I don't get a Steam Machine right away, is there anything else I can do?":
Griffais says that SteamOS in its current form should work best on console-like setups where the PC is paired to a TV and runs on a single-boot hard drive.
Installing SteamOS on non-AMD hardware is technically possible, but far more complex than it should be. Valve is reportedly working to address all the compatibility limitations. However, building a gaming PC right now will probably cost about the same as a Steam Machine because of the RAM shortage.
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Impacted Markets
1 marketWill the Steam Machine cost $700 or more at release?
Polymarket
Vol: $172.7kLiq: $8.7k
Impact
2/10
Volatility
low
Macro
low
Risk
low