Valve Reveals It’s Next-Gen Steam Machine


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Valve is back in the “console” business. The Washington-based company has officially announced its next-gen Steam Machine to the world.

The Steam Machine is scheduled to launch in early 2026, though no firm date nor pricing has been confirmed.

Known internally as “Fremont”, this new console has been rumored for a long time. This summer, benchmarks for the device even appeared on Geekbench.

The system will run SteamOS and features a built-in power supply, storage of up to 2TB, and the ability to play at 4K with 60FPS on a “semi-custom” AMD CPU and GPU.

More Steam: Steam Controller 2 Announced By Valve

In addition to being designed for Steam, Valve says that users will be able to install their own operating system and apps on the device. They also say that it “enough horsepower” to stream to your Steam Deck, Steam Link, or even your new Steam Frame VR Headset.

You can check out the full specs for yourself below, including memory, inputs, networking connectivity, and more.

Steam Machine Specs

Spec Details
CPU Semi-custom AMD Zen 4 6C / 12T
Up to 4.8 GHz, 30 W TDP
GPU Semi-custom AMD RDNA3 28 CUs
2.45 GHz max sustained clock, 110 W TDP
RAM 16 GB DDR5 + 8 GB GDDR6 VRAM
Power Internal power supply (AC 110-240 V)
Storage Two models:
• 512 GB NVMe SSD
• 2 TB NVMe SSD
Both include a high-speed microSD card slot
Wi-Fi 2×2 Wi-Fi 6E
Bluetooth Bluetooth 5.3 with dedicated antenna
Steam Controller Integrated 2.4 GHz Steam Controller wireless adapter
Displays DisplayPort 1.4: Up to 4 K @ 240 Hz or 8 K @ 60 Hz / HDR, FreeSync, daisy-chain support
HDMI 2.0: Up to 4 K @ 120 Hz / HDR, FreeSync, CEC support
USB Ports Front: 2 × USB-A 3.2 Gen 1 ports
Back: 2 × USB-A 2.0 (high speed) + 1 × USB-C 3.2 Gen 2 port
Networking Gigabit Ethernet
LED Strip 17 individually addressable RGB LEDs (for status and custom lighting)
Size & Weight Size: 152 mm tall (148 mm without feet) × 162.4 mm deep × 156 mm wide
Weight: 2.6 kg
Operating System SteamOS 3 (Arch-based)
Desktop Environment KDE Plasma

This isn’t the first time Steam has tried the standalone box. Back in 2015, the first generation of Steam Machines were released, but they didn’t perform too well and were quickly discontinued.

Are you going to pick up the new Steam Machine when it becomes available? Leave your thoughts down in the comments and join the official Insider Gaming Discord server.


For more Insider Gaming Tech, read about how Steam’s most popular graphics card is over four years old. And don’t forget to sign up for our weekly newsletter.



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