Steam Hardware
A place to discuss and support all Steam Hardware, including Steam Deck, Steam Machine, Steam Frame, and SteamOS in general.
As Lemmy doesn't have flairs yet, you can use these prefixes to indicate what type of post you have made, eg:
[Flair] My post title
The following is a list of suggested flairs:
[Deck] - Steam Deck related.
[Controller] - Steam Controller related.
[Machine] - Steam Machine related.
[Frame] - Steam Frame related.
[Discussion] - General discussion.
[Help] - A request for help or support.
[News] - News about the deck.
[PSA] - Sharing important information.
[Game] - News / info about a game on the deck.
[Update] - An update to a previous post.
[Meta] - Discussion about this community.
If your post is only relevant to one hardware device (Deck/Machine/Frame/etc) please specify which one as part of the title or by using a device flair.
These are not enforced, but they are encouraged.
Rules:
- Follow the rules of Sopuli
- Posts must be related to Steam Hardware or Steam OS in an obvious way.
- No piracy, there are other communities for that.
- Discussion of emulators are allowed, but no discussion on how to illegally acquire ROMs.
- This is a place of civil discussion, no trolling.
- Have fun.
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I’ve been saying since the beginning of the RAM crisis that there was no way this was going to be under $999 since Valve wasn’t willing to make it a loss leader. Oh, the sweet validation. And more importantly: fuck AI. I’ll see you all when the Steam Frame is +$1,499 USD.
It's literally a PC. IT departments all over the world would have absolutely no problem taking this hardware, and using it for their open office hell. Steam would get absolutely zero dollars. Steam needs the hardware to stand on its own
I’m not faulting them (look at what happened with the PS3), but it was still a point towards its price being higher than the folks that thought it’d be priced closer to a PS5 or Xbox Series.
US military bulking buying the PS3 🤣
Well Call of Duty is their Number 1 most successful marketing campaign by far so that is pretty common...
Doh! You mean when they did this
https://www.slashgear.com/1654787/military-playstation-supercomputer-ps3-united-states-air-force-about/
Yep.
I was initially hopeful that this thing might be surprisingly affordable, due to... basicslly the theory/rumor is that the 'semi custom' apu was initially intended to be used in a planned but cancelled Windows tablet/Surface kind of thing...
But yeah, then, tariffs, rampocalypse, strait's closed due to raids = shipping costs go up bigly.
I'm pretty sure the way Valve does their internal finances is that that 30% cut of all games?
Sure some of it goes toward Steam server costs, but I think most of it just goes into a giant war chest fund, from which they 'experiment', with things like this.
Makes sense to me that they at least want to break even... business wise, that works if it makes more people use Steam and/or increases their reputation as actually innovating in some way.
But being a loss leader would simply be too dangerous, too risky. They are small fries compared to the major console/pc hw manufacturers, and I am very sure the last thing they would ever want to do is owe some outside actor a lot of money.
Valve may reach 10b annually with their hardware expansion releasing good products.
Can you clarify what you mean by this?
Are you saying... $10b annually in harware sales?
Using the $1128 price for the 512GB SM + Controller, that'd be uh... ~8.8m units sold annually.
That's totally absurd, imo.
That's roughly a quarter of 2025's PS5 (any variant) console sales numbers.
Valve would have to pivot into basically only/primarily being a hw manufacturer, they'd have to ... somewhere between 10x and 100x the amount of money/capital they're currently using to source components, do assembly and then ship things physically.
They do not have that much money.
Valve has like a total of less than 500 employees, their entire business culture is built around having a very small number of incredibly competent and often multi-domain skilled employees.
They'd have to radically shift the entire fundamental structure of what the company is, to do something like that.
... but perhaps I misunderstand what you mean?
No, I mean they could after expanding their hardware offerings.