
A console that is not a console, and a storefront of oddities
Valve’s Steam Machine arrives at a moment when the gaming world is split between polished platform wars and the anarchic creativity of a digital marketplace.
On a quiet afternoon in a living room, a reviewer unboxes the new Steam Machine, connects it to the television, and tries to pair the controller. The handshake fails, repeatedly. The TV does not recognise the signal; the audio emerges only in stereo. To coax HDR and variable refresh rates out of the screen, the tester must manually dig into the television’s game-mode settings. Compatibility layers that translate Windows games to the Linux-based SteamOS are not pre-installed, so the first hour is spent downloading them. This is not the frictionless “plug and play” ritual that console owners have known for decades. It is, instead, the unmistakable texture of a PC trying to pass as a living-room appliance.
Valve, the American company behind the Steam marketplace and game franchises such as Half-Life, announced that the Steam Machine will begin shipping on 29 June, with pre-orders opening on 25 June. The entry-level model, with 512 GB of storage, is priced at $1,049; adding the new Steam Controller brings the cost to $1,128. A 2 TB version reaches $1,349. The company attributes the steep pricing to the exploding cost of memory chips, driven by the global boom in AI data centres, which has more than tripled over the past year and constrained production volumes. This is Valve’s second attempt at a living-room device: a line of Steam Machines launched in 2015 fizzled out by 2018, but the handheld Steam Deck, released in 2022, sold millions and revived the ambition to build a compact, television-friendly PC that can also function as a desktop computer.
Viewed from Jakarta, where gaming outlets have been tracking the console wars, the Steam Machine enters a field already shaped by two very different philosophies. Sony’s PlayStation 5, now more than five years old, remains the choice for players who prioritise high-fidelity graphics, ray tracing, and the haptic immersion of the DualSense controller. Nintendo’s newly released Switch 2, by contrast, bets on hybrid flexibility: a 7.9-inch LCD screen with 120 Hz refresh rate and HDR support in handheld mode, scaling up to 4K output when docked, aided by Nvidia’s DLSS upscaling technology. The Switch 2 does not compete on raw teraflops; it competes on the ability to continue a session on a train. The Steam Machine, with its AMD Zen 4 processor and RDNA 3 graphics, promises 4K at 60 frames per second, but early hands-on reports suggest that in practice it often relies on upscaling from 1080p or 1440p to maintain playable frame rates, and it lacks the automatic per-game optimisation that console users take for granted.
Yet the device arrives on a storefront that has never been merely a shop. Steam is also a theatre of the absurd. This month, Indonesian media noted that a multiplayer horror game called Spooky Men, which lasts roughly ten minutes, is listed at $1,000. Its user reviews are “Mostly Positive”, but almost all come from players who bought it when it cost less than a dollar, or who received free codes from the developer. Observers suspect a marketing stunt or an experiment in algorithmic visibility. At the other extreme, a hide-and-seek game named Meccha Chameleon, created by a single developer with no advertising budget, sold seven million copies in twelve days, surpassing the early sales pace of blockbusters such as Resident Evil Requiem. Its peak concurrent player count on Steam reached over 340,000, propelled entirely by streamer clips and word-of-mouth. The same platform that hosts the painstakingly engineered Steam Machine also hosts a $1,000 joke and a viral sensation built by one person.
Valve says it will allocate the first batch of consoles through a randomised reservation system, a measure it describes as fairer in the face of high demand. The company points to the Steam Deck’s history of post-launch software improvements as a reason for confidence. For now, the Steam Machine sits in an ambiguous space: a quiet, upgradeable Linux PC that wants to be a console, and a console that still asks its owner to toggle display settings and troubleshoot Bluetooth pairings. It is a bet that the living room is ready for a machine that refuses to choose a single identity, launched into an ecosystem where a ten-minute horror game can cost as much as the console itself, and where a hide-and-seek title can outsell a corporate franchise in under a fortnight.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 3 languages
The Southeast Asian press frames the Steam Machine launch within a heated console war, emphasizing competitive showdowns between PlayStation, Nintendo, and now Valve. Coverage mixes market pragmatism with sensational outliers—like a $1,000 game that lasts ten minutes—and viral success stories, painting a volatile, opportunistic landscape.
Chinese tech reviewers put the Steam Machine through its paces, praising its living-room comfort but cautioning that it still demands PC-style tweaking rather than true plug-and-play simplicity. At nearly twice the price of a PS5, the device offers a quiet Linux PC experience without decisively outperforming Sony's older console.
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