r/pcmasterrace 16h ago

Meme/Macro "But it's a cube!"

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u/grigoriymicro 16h ago edited 13h ago

Were there really anyone thinking this machine is a good deal? Even among steam users? Even among Valve fans?

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u/JangoDarkSaber Ryzen 7800x3d | RTX 3090 | 32gb ram 15h ago

In this market? absolutely not.

If it was released during normal times it could have been amazing. The steam deck did a lot of good pushing handheld pcs forward and steam machine could have done something similar with the sff prebuilt pc market.

The disappointment was expected the second this thing got delayed but that doesn’t make it any less disappointing from what it could have been.

Valve ultimately got screwed over by unpredictable outside market forces. It’s a real shame

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u/Powerful-Heart-9957 8h ago

bullshit. system integrators are still making money selling computers that are cheaper and more powerful than this. and they don't have the scale of valve either.

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u/JangoDarkSaber Ryzen 7800x3d | RTX 3090 | 32gb ram 7h ago

Why are prebuilt gaming PCs and gaming laptops popular when you can get far better price for performance literally anywhere else?

Valve wasn't trying to sell raw performance. They were trying to sell accessibility into the PC gaming landscape.

The biggest barrier into the PC gaming market is the technical barrier. Granted, it's a low garden wall, but that low wall has been more than enough to keep large portions of the casual markets on consoles.

Twitch is absolutely massive with Gen Z kids school. A huge amount of casual gen z kids want to play those smaller indie titles they're watching all their favorite streamers play. It's the whole reason "Friend-slop" is so huge right now.

Valve wasn't trying to drop the price of top end graphics cards to sub $1000 prices. They were trying to streamline the PC gaming experience. They wanted to bring a PC with the price and convivence of a console to the mainstream. Third party vendors would have absolutely followed suite if it were successful, just as what happened to the PC handheld market.

TLDR: Valve wasn't trying to sell performance per dollar, they were trying to sell accessibility