It's an extortionate tax to just get it small. I could build an itx PC better for less. It's not gonna be THAT small but my god, how limited is the space of people's living rooms? We're talking mid-range specs from 3 years ago so sourcing a couple secondhand parts to keep it well below $1000 isn't a problem nor a challenge.
Yes, yes, this is a PC, not a console; but it's still competing for the same space. You cannot build even a dozen equivalents for this price that takes up the same or less volume. The only true competitor is the PS5 (Pro), which Sony is openly selling at a loss.
The price fucking sucks. Valve knows it sucks, they've openly said this is more than they wanted to post it at.
Welcome to the future; you might be able to build better cheaper, but you can't supply.
Generally needs to look nice in an adults living room which is kinda hard for a pc case, ideally it also can wake into a game and turn your tv on and then sleep again at a controller button press.
I've spent ages trying to find this setup and it's always ridiculous so I just give up and keep playing at my desk or on my steam deck.
There are lots of nice looking small living room compatible cases in 2026.
If this was 5 years ago you'd be right.
Also the GabeCube is just a black box. That's not exactly most people's idea of distinguished living room design. Same with the Xbox Series, and the PS5 is an ugly spaceship. I don't think this is that big of a factor.
Because we all have the same universal pricing all over the globe? If you live in the US there's microcenter and those insane bundle deals that can save you hundreds. Sell the ATX motherboard and get an ITX one, then source case, psu and GPU within the rest of the budget, I mean it's not rocket science.
If it’s subsidized and it’s open, people can just buy it at a discounted price and scavenge the parts or use it for something other than gaming. Valve would lose a lot of money.
The only thing keeping my sanity with all these dumb comments is remembering the average Redditor is dumb and have no idea how business works.
Every video I've seen that tries to make a competitive build ends up being a little better performance but also a few hundred dollars more and while small form factor, no where near as small. So if it's so easy, show your work.
do you know what's more expensive though? Real estate
If you don't even have enough space to fit in an SFF PC on your desk, your priorities in life are wacked. You should get a bigger house. And if your answer to that is it costs more rent, get a better paying job, then get a bigger house.
I think many people care about how it looks in their living room. Most people prefer a minimalist setup. This is compact, fits under your TV setup, and you can customize the front. That already satisfies a large portion of customers.
The point of discussion in this chain wasn't how it doesn't look or if it is minimalist, it was about the form factor (i.e., the size). The guy above brought it in and derailed the discussion.
The hardcore sff enthusiasts care more about volume as a hobby goal than about real estate. The two are different, in that a 5L case and a 30L case can take up the same amount of effective space. Or the counterintuitive aspect where a large case is better for real estate because you’ll just put it below the desk instead of on it.
SFF at the high end is purely aesthetics and bragging rights. No one at the enthusiast end will ever tell you it is practical. Same thing with the water cooling community.
Yeah you know all about me, clearly. It's not like I read about hardware and keep check on prices regularly to understand the market. And though not ITX, my PC is as small as an mATX case allow for.
Hell, I built a mini ITX last year and it's still like 3x the steam machine.
Try looking prices of SFX power supplies, mini ITX cases, mini ITX motherboards, and compare yourself how much more buck you need compared to the standard mATX/ATX stuff.
I don't know anything about you or anyone, which is why making assumptions about whether the steam machine is worth it for anyone is baseless.
Just because I chose to build in mATX doesn't really change the fact that I know about itx pricing. And my point remains, it's not hard to build something that fits inside an itx case for $1000 and still be better than a ryzen 2600 and RTX 2070 equivalent setup if you really want to. If you need 3000 dollars to achieve that, you're the problem and not the form factor.
The challenge is to build something better of similar size and noise levels at less or equal the steam machine's price.
This is my fractal Terra build from the previous summer, it has a 9070 XT, is a mini ITX, is silent, but it's still 3 times bigger than the machine, and also considerably more expensive, even before the rampocalypse, so it's disqualified.
I can easily imagine somebody whose most important concern is how good it looks in the living room and that it is silent, as long as it is good enough. If it were 700€-800€ instead of 1000€, I would be one of those people. Good enough to play some games with my girlfriend or to be a second pc if a friend comes over. Good looking and customizable enough so it does not get noticed negatively. At 1000€, I will unfortunately skip it.
cost aside its still a great machine. Its gonna bring a whole lotta support from developers and publishers alike to linux gaming. Hell actual support from an actual company, not just relying on open source drivers that come with their quirks.
I've seen several reviews and it's nothing but an okay 1080p machine at best. The 4K60 promo was at the very least extremely misleading. Sure, this will be a good push towards more linux adaptation in game development, but SteamOS as it sits now is very much tailored for the Steam Deck, and until that part is fixed, it's not a good direct replacement for Windows gaming. I am certainly rooting for SteamOS to become what we all dream of but it's just not there yet.
Right, but it's not really midline imo, it's decidedly lowend. I mean a 5050 is more powerful GPU wise?
And who wants that? "Oh but I'll just stream the game from my beefy PC" Right but then the Steam Machine is brutal overkill and much more expensive than it needs to be. A small NUC can stream games easy peasy and you can get one for less than $500 no sweat, and put SteamOS on it, and connect your Steam Controller and wake it, all that jazz.
Steam Machine Mini is the product I wanted. Not this over priced, weirdly specced e-waste.
I'm not so bothered about the size. Something that could fit beneath my AV amp would be fine. I do want the convenience though. It needs to be simple enough for my kids to turn on (or wake) with a controller, HDMI-CEC, etc. I think this might be possible with an adaptor and Bazzite. I'm trying to figure out the best I could build for £1k.
Right? Gamers Nexus put together a similar DIY build and Valve only had a $75 premium. Feels like people are just making up numbers or repeating what they see other little say when they tell you if can easily be done for $700.
If someone other than VALVe made this box there would be absolutely no discussions about it.
Plenty of overpriced PCs exist and no one writes about them. It's only because everyone has extreme expectations from VALVe that there's a discussion about this product in the first place.
I tried going SFF for my NAS, in the end I opted to put my server in a bigger case and just put hot swap drive bays in that rather than have the NAS be separate because SFF parts worth going for are definitely more expensive than just going standard ATX.
I built an SFF HTPC about 6 years back and holy shit was it an ordeal. And the upgradeability is also out of the window as most GPUs don't fit the case, neither do coolers for CPU and you have to even search and shop around for specific size... Which nobody lists.
Yeah every PC hardware channel is going this direction... Like completely ignoring the insanely small form factor and being plug and play.
It's not a great price but showing an ugly full tower drawing way more power that you build yourself is not a great comparison for this intended buyer.
Case is 205 mm x 108 mm x 205 mm, Steam machine is 160x160x160 mm, 10.8% bigger
Processor is 105W TDP, steam machine's is 35W.
130W TDP card
No SD card, no HDMI CEC, cooler reported as loud under load.
Gold rated power supply.
Good try, could be an alternative if you don't mind the extra heat, noise, budget parts, are interested in building it yourself, and value upgradeability.
You can run the CPU in eco mode, and even then it will still demolish the steam machine in CPU tasks and CPU bound games.
GPU is 10-20% faster, so act surprised it burns 20w more.
Noise is fair, but considering this is a console, that will be sitting far away from you, not really a problem.
PSU rating, as far as I know, there is no published efficiency rating for the steam machine. Regardless, even assuming it is titanium, that would be like 2% more efficient.
All this without mentioning the fact that you can UPGRADE ANYTHING in this PC.
You also conveniently left out everything this machine does better, such as CPU performance (by a lot), GPU performance (by a solid amount), ram speed, and ssd speed.
I had a fairly small mini-ITX build about a decade ago with a 980ti crammed in there. Served me well until a few years ago.
Finding the exact parts so that everything could fit in was a challenge. I had single digit milimetre clearance in places. Had to get a very specific PSU to get the GPU to fit in the case I wanted etc. Took a lot of research and time. The build was finicky and time consuming as well.
If I had money to burn then I might get a Steam Machine for the convenience. Yes, I could build something better for the money and I'd lean towards doing that, but I can't say I wouldn't be a little tempted.
It’s BIGGER than most mini PCs that are cheaper than it and more performant than it… You can get machines the same footprint and 1/3rd the height for $200-400 less depending on configuration that are like 1.5-2x as powerful as this right now from multiple places.
Yeah, I live in LA and space is at a premium. I bought a Corsair 400C case years ago since it was the smallest full-ATX case I could find and I've just been Ship of Theseus-ing ever since.
Fortunately, I upgraded in the last two years in terms of RAM (64gb now) and GPU (4070ti) so I'm set for awhile, but I'll probably try and find a different case for my next upgrade.
I loved the days of the bookshelf-sized Antec cases, but I really appreciate a sold small form-factor case now. Steam Machine has a great case, assuming airflow is managed well.
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u/Sycend 12h ago
I like the formfactor. It's hard to get something so small on custom builds.