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Valve surprises with 3 new hardware devices in a full-circle moment for gaming giant

12 November 2025 at 13:53
Clockwise from top left: the Steam Frame, the Steam Machine 2026, the Steam Controller 2026, and a Steam Deck. (Valve Image)

In a surprise Wednesday drop, Bellevue, Wash.-based Valve Software unveiled three new physical gaming devices intended to work with its digital storefront Steam.

Planned for release in early 2026, the devices are described as new parts of the β€œSteam Hardware family.” They include the Steam Machine, a small console intended for users’ living rooms; the Steam Frame, a lightweight VR headset; and a new Steam Controller, which features several new interfaces similar to those found on Valve’s Steam Deck.

β€œWe’ve been super happy with the success of Steam Deck, and PC gamers have continued asking for even more ways to play all the great titles in their Steam libraries,” Gabe Newell, president of Valve, said in a press release.

β€œOur work over the years on other hardware and even more importantly on SteamOS has enabled Steam Controller, Steam Machine, and Steam Frame to do just that,” Newell said.

The Steam Machine is a 6-inch cube that’s designed to fit unobtrusively into a living room or entertainment center. It’s intended to quietly and efficiently run games from your Steam library, with a removable front panel for decorative purposes and an LED so users can readily tell when it’s on or off.

Like the Steam Deck, the Steam Machine runs on a Linux-based operating system that’s built around Steam. If plugged into a monitor and keyboard, it can be used as a standalone PC with a KDE Plasma desktop environment.

The Steam Frame is a standalone virtual reality headset that’s reportedly able to stream any game from users’ Steam library, with full controller input. It’s a PC in its own right, so it can be used by itself, rather than having to be hooked up to a desktop.

Finally, the Steam Controller β€œshares DNA” with the Steam Deck, and is described by Valve as β€œhigh-performance” and β€œergonomic,” with magnetic thumbsticks, trackpads, a gyroscope, and buttons on the grips. In addition to being designed for the Steam Machine, the Steam Controller is compatible with PCs and laptops.

Announcing: New @steampowered.com Hardware, coming in 2026:Steam ControllerSteam MachineSteam Frame.Β Watch our jazzy announcement video and wishlist now: steampowered.com/hardware

β€” Valve (@valvesoftware.com) 2025-11-12T18:03:16.483Z

Valve’s announcement on Wednesday came roughly 10 minutes after a series of rumors and leaks that went viral in the PC gaming community, apparently spurred by an accidental release by one of Valve’s partner companies.

No announcements were made regarding exact release dates or prices for any of the devices, but Valve did state it hopes to share those details after the first of the year.

This is a full-circle move for Valve, which had previously attempted to break into both the controller and living room markets with similar devices. Previous editions of both the Steam Controller and Steam Machine were released in 2015 and discontinued in 2019. Valve still sells its high-end Valve Index VR system, which first came out in 2019, though it’s out of stock at time of writing.

This is a seemingly strange time for Valve to revisit its hardware divisions, but the Steam Deck’s success seems to have reignited its ambition to reshape the face of PC gaming. Newell has been vocal for years about how he believes Windows is a poor environment for computer games, and Valve has made a number of moves in recent memory that all come back to trying to expand Linux’s presence in the scene. Through that lens, the new 2026 Steam Machine in particular seems like another quiet shot across Microsoft’s bow.

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