After months of anticipation, gamers were finally treated to the Steam Machine reveal. But unfortunately, a few details shared by Valve are kind of painful. The Steam Machine starts at $1,049 for the 512GB model and rises to $1,349 for the 2TB version. Add the Steam Controller, and the system immediately becomes a premium system.
Valve’s console-like gaming PC costs far above the traditional consoles, so buyers will compare it against the Xbox and PlayStation. Though Valve has a blunt explanation. The company says Steam Machine, like its other hardware, is built from components sourced from manufacturers around the world. The final selling price reflects what those parts cost.
RAM and storage ruined the old plan
Valve revealed that it began sourcing Steam Machine components in 2023, when the company believed it had a good sense of how PC hardware prices would evolve. Parts usually get cheaper over time as newer technology arrives. While this was the right assumption at the time, it did not hold a couple of years later.
According to Valve, the past year changed things “quickly and significantly,” especially for RAM and storage. The original Steam Machine price target is no longer viable, and the current pricing reflects component costs it secured over the past six months. If this sounds familiar, it’s because this is something PC gamers have been facing for a while now–while consoles have been seeing the impact more recently.
Consoles are often priced aggressively because platform holders can make money back through software, subscriptions, and closed ecosystems. But Valve is selling the Steam Machine closer to what the hardware actually costs.

How availability took a hit too
Price was not the only casualty. Valve says availability was affected as well, with periods when it could not source certain components “at all, at any price.” That directly impacted how many Steam Machines the company could build for launch. Valve is also using a reservation system rather than letting the launch instantly become a scalper buffet. It is trying to manage a limited supply while keeping the device from turning into another impossible-to-buy PC gaming box.


