Another new gaming console, this time with an even more ludicrous price tag. More than a grand. How long until the Steam Machine goes the way of the Stadia and Ouya? New consoles already have a tough time competing with the mainstays. The only brand new console line (not Xbox or PlayStation) I can think of that has made it off the ground is the Switch, which is arguably just the evolution of the DS.
A significant difference is you can run Steam on any Linux machine (amd64
or aarch64, and yes, it includes libraries to dynamically translate amd64 binaries to aarch64 and it
fucking works, which blew my mind last year when I tried it -- go look up box64 to see that wizardry) and on most machines capable of running games on Windows, it'll run games better on Linux.
You don't
need a Steam Machine to do any of that. You can slap Steam on your regular Linux box and it'll probably work just as well (or better if you've got better specs). I'm running a Beelink GTR9 Pro (AMD Ryzen AI Max+ 395), dual-booting Windows and Linux, and underneath all that retarded brand naming and idiot model numbering is a 16-core 5.1GHz Zen 5 CPU, with 128GB of unified RAM, and a monster fucking GPU baked into the CPU. Well, a monster as far as APUs go anyway, but it runs LLMs very nicely and holy fuck does it go ham on games. I run it attached to an ultrawide (32:9, 5120x1440 at 120Hz) and everything I've thrown at it runs smooth as silk.
AMD even recently updated their ROCm stack to fix my only major annoyance with it (prior to this update in April, you had to "declare" the CPU/GPU memory split at boot time in the BIOS, e.g. 32GB for OS and 96GB for VRAM, but that's fixed and dynamically managed on demand now).
Windows games literally run better on Linux now than they do on Windows on the same hardware thanks to Valve's efforts and support of existing (and new) tech to support it. Proton, box64, Steam's own "special sauce" runtimes (open-sourced, btw), Wine, and all that good stuff all adds up to "runs Windows games better than Windows."
Steam Machine should have cost about half this. You can thank the AI bubble for storage and memory costs doubling its originally-slated price. I imagine people will still buy it to support Valve's Linux efforts (and their hardware efforts too) even if the specs don't make it a bargain.
Valve also don't need Steam Machine to succeed either, unlike Microsoft, Sony and Nintendo who need their consoles to even
be in this industry. On PC, Steam
is the industry. Branded hardware is just the vanity option.
