Steam Machine Review in Progress: So Many Questions for Such a Little Box


The first thing that hit me after unboxing Valve’s Steam Machine at home was: wow, this is small. I’d already seen this thing in person last November, but its size still impressed me.

Steam Machine is smaller than a PlayStation 5. It’s smaller than an Xbox. It’s a cube you could put next to your TV easily, or carry in a box on a vacation with friends, which is what I did. It’s shockingly portable. But dense. And you do still need a power outlet and TV or monitor to plug into.

This isn’t a Steam Deck. Steam Machine is Valve’s return to trying to make a PC game console — and unfortunately, it’s arriving at a terrible time. Electronics prices for computer components such as RAM and SSD storage are going through the roof, and game consoles including the PlayStation and Xbox are seeing price hikes, even on 6-year-old hardware. The Steam Machine’s starting price of $1,049 is already out of reach for many people.

Valve Steam Machine with Steam Controller, on black table

Size-wise, this is exactly the sort of console I’d want.

Scott Stein/CNET

Plus, while it’s fun to see Valve making its own PC gaming hardware, there are already plenty of ways to play Steam on Windows PCs of all shapes and sizes and prices. The Steam Deck is unique because it’s handheld and relatively small (and, originally, pretty affordable). The Steam Machine only has one of those things in its favor.

But as a demonstration of how approachable and console-like PC game hardware can be, I love the effort so far. Even if that effort is rough, incomplete and not as high-performance as you’d maybe expect for the price.

Valve Steam Machine, showing back of the system and its vent fan

The Steam Machine has a big fan vent system running through it front to back. It runs quietly, but the air coming out can get very warm.

Scott Stein/CNET

I’ll have a full review of Steam Machine eventually, but for now I wanted to share some thoughts after a week with one at home and on the road.

The review unit I received from Valve is the top-end model: a $1428 package that has 2 TB of storage, two swappable magnetic face plates and a Steam Controller (which, by the way, I love). The starting $1,049 config has no controller and 512GB of storage. All models have the same AMD Zen 4 CPU, custom AMD RDNA3 GPU, 16GB DDR5 RAM and 8GB GDDR6 VRAM. There’s a microSD card slot for expandable storage, too.

@cnetdotcom Valve’s PC game console, the Steam Machine, is coming but it won’t be cheap, thanks to the ongoing memory shortage referred to as RAMageddon. The window to buy the console will started today and will be open for three days. Those who do not complete their purchase will lose their reservation, and it will go to someone else. Unbox the $1,428 2TB model with a Steam Controller. #unboxing #steammachine #valve #pcgaming #steamcontroller @scottstein89 ♬ Domino hoodtrap by Kryd – Kryd

Steam Machine’s gorgeously small design

I can’t say enough about the Steam Frame’s compact size because I really love it. I’ve felt repelled from home PC gaming rigs partially because of how much space they take up. But the Steam Machine feels tinier than any PlayStation or Xbox, and it’s easy to perch on a shelf or a mantle. 

There isn’t a big adapter brick either: A simple power cord just plugs into the back. That makes TV setup a lot easier.

Valve Steam Machine on a mantle next to Xbox Series X

The Steam Machine (left) next to the Xbox Series X (right). It’s half the size.

Scott Stein/CNET

It also makes me want to set it up in a living room to show off. But, as I’m doing now, it easily plops next to my laptop and my gaming TV in my office, too.

The whole box is a venting system, with intake in the front and a big fan exhaust covering the back. The front faceplate is magnetically swappable, and two included plates (red fabric and plastic woodgrain) are fun and easy to snap on to change its look. I’m also into the minimal power button and LED status bar at the bottom of the cube, which glow in various patterns for system status. The LED bar fills up to show download progress when you have the TV off and just want to see if your game’s ready.

Valve Steam Machine plugged in under a TV showing games

It’s easy to get going with the Steam Machine, but not all games will be smooth sailing.

Scott Stein/CNET

Things just work (sometimes)

The Steam Machine has no instruction manual. You just plug it in, walk through a few login startup things, download a software update and it’s running. It felt like an extension of the Steam Deck as I logged in and found everything all ready for me, minus the game downloads.

The Steam Controllers work without their charge puck dongles via direct pairing with the Steam Machine, saving a step. But some firmware updates were needed, though they were relatively painless.

The Steam Machine’s default support for games is 1,920×1,080, and while you can ramp the resolution up, Valve’s settings warn that Steam Machine-verified games are tested for 1,920×1,080. Wandering outside that zone might not be great.

Valve Steam Machine plugged into TV with Baby Steps game playing

Baby Steps is one of a handful of games I’ve tried on the Steam Machine so far at its default 1080p resolution.

Scott Stein/CNET

Steam Machine performance seems… OK

Honestly, 1080p is fine for me on my 42-inch office screen, but for a game console that starts at $1,000, it might seem pretty disappointing. (More soon on how 4K gaming feels.) It underlines the general sense I’ve gotten from the Steam Machine that, gaming performance-wise, it’s… fine. Not amazing. Not terrible (though sometimes it feels a step below the PS5 and Xbox Series X).

But I’ve had some weird game issues. Star Wars Squadrons wouldn’t let me log in — maybe it needed a keyboard and mouse, but the Steam Controller wasn’t recognized. A few games showed odd, pixelated pop-up graphics driver error messages that I couldn’t easily exit, too. After several reboots of some of these games, the errors disappeared. Other times, not so much.

Valve Steam Machine view of the front grill with the magnetic plate taken off

The front plate magnetically pops off, and hey, it’s an airflow system to cool the internals. You can peek right in.

Scott Stein/CNET

Generally, though, games play fine out of the ones I’ve been casually checking: Death Stranding 2, Spider-Man 2, UFO 50 (a bit of odd framerate issues), Stray, Subnautica, Team Fortress 2, Elden Ring, Hot Wheels Unleashed 2 and Baby Steps.

Valve did a lot of iterative improvements to game performance on the Steam Deck over time. And with the Steam Machine, it’ll likely be the same. But as early reviews and Reddit forums are already reporting, your mileage will definitely vary on this hardware early on.

Valve Steam Machine with red faceplate and Steam Deck game handheld on top of it

The Steam Deck next to the Steam Machine shows how small the Steam Machine is. The Steam Deck is totally portable, too.

Scott Stein/CNET

Machine vs. Deck versus Frame

The Steam Machine’s total proposition just isn’t as exciting as a portable Steam Deck that has its own screen, and while Valve is clearly proving out a future where PC game consoles can be as good as (or even replace) consoles like the PlayStation and Xbox, the price equation and similarity to other PC gaming options are hard to ignore. My son’s friend was busy playing Steam games on his laptop as I played on the Steam Machine, and that’s kind of the case in point: there are so many ways to play Steam stuff.

But the ARM-based Steam Frame VR headset, also expected this summer, will push Steam games to smaller chipsets. The Machine is expanding out the Deck’s design in larger forms. There’s a spectrum Valve is exploring, clearly. I’m curious how the pieces all play out. Meanwhile, I’ll be finishing this review. But even when I do, I still want to experience and review the Frame in comparison to understand what the Machine’s comparative value is for someone who wants and can afford to buy a New Steam Thing in 2026.





Source link

Leave a Reply

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Get our latest articles delivered straight to your inbox. No spam, we promise.

Recent Reviews


How to get Siri AI - join the waitlist today

Apple / Elyse Betters Picaro / ZDNET

Follow ZDNET: Add us as a preferred source on Google.


ZDNET’s key takeaways

  • Siri AI requires the iOS 27 developer beta and a waitlist.
  • A free Apple Developer account is enough to install the beta.
  • Apple says Siri AI will launch in beta later this year.

Apple finally gave Siri the major update everyone has wanted for years, moving it from the voice assistant era to the intelligent AI era.

At WWDC 2026 in June, the company introduced Siri AI, a new version of Siri “powered by Apple Intelligence.” Apple said Siri AI is more conversational, understands personal context, can answer broader questions, and can take action across apps. It can also use my information from messages, emails, photos, notes, and the screen itself to get more done on my behalf.

Also: The two biggest iOS 27 features at WWDC for me had nothing to do with Siri AI

The catch? (There’s always one, right?) The iOS 27 developer beta needs to be installed first, and even then, there is a waitlist.

How to get Siri AI

What you’ll need: An iPhone 15 Pro or Pro Max, any iPhone 16 model, or any iPhone 17 model running the iOS 27 developer beta.

Install the iOS 27 developer beta on a secondary device, but be sure to back it up first. Remember, developer betas are unfinished software. Apps can crash or glitch, battery life can drain, and features can disappear.

The good news is Apple no longer requires a $99-a-year Apple Developer Program membership just to get access to beta software. A free Apple Developer account is enough. To join, if you haven’t before, simply go to Apple’s Developer website or use the Apple Developer app, sign in, and agree to the developer terms.

Also: 3 new MacOS 27 features make it worth upgrading right away for me – Siri included

Once that’s done, any new developer beta will automatically appear for the iPhone associated with that Apple Account. To check for iOS 27 and install it now, open Settings > General > Software Update > Beta Updates. From there, select iOS 27 Developer Beta, go back to the Software Update screen, and install the update.

Need help? Check out ZDNET’s guide on installing the iOS 27 developer beta.


Show more

Install the iOS 27 developer beta

Elyse Betters Picaro / ZDNET

After the iOS 27 developer beta is installed, the iPhone will reboot, but Siri AI will not automatically be available to try. Apple is using a waitlist. To join it, open the Settings app, go to Apple Intelligence and Siri, and select “Try New Siri.” Follow the prompts to opt in. Once a spot opens, a notification will appear saying New Siri is available.

Also: Getting real about WWDC and Siri AI – Video

Apple has not confirmed how long the wait will take, but it has said Siri AI will be available in beta “later this year.”


Show more

Join the Siri AI waitlist

Elyse Betters Picaro / ZDNET

Should you wait to try Siri AI?

Maybe. The iOS 27 developer beta is the only route to Siri AI right now. But it’s meant for developers testing apps and APIs, not for most people who need a stable daily phone. Only install it on an iPhone that’s not used every day, or wait for the iOS 27 public beta. That’s expected in July and is easy for anyone to try. An official release for the general public isn’t expected until this fall.

Also: How Data Can Improve Your Health and Wellness

As for me? I joined. I have a spare iPhone running the iOS 27 developer beta right now, and the first thing I did was get on the waitlist to try Siri AI. But that’s because I’m usually excited to try AI tools, and I want to play with the new Siri and be able to write about it. 

Should you join Siri Ai waitlist?

Elyse Betters Picaro / ZDNET

What can Siri AI do?

Apple said the new Siri AI is “a dramatically more capable and conversational assistant” that can help you “find information and get things done throughout the day.” That’s nice, but what, specifically, can it do? According to Apple, the new Siri AI can:

Also: Will your iPhone support Siri AI? The answer is complicated

  • Access “broad world knowledge for up-to-date answers” on any topic.
  • Provide “detailed responses” and “natural back-and-forth conversation.”
  • Use “personal context” in messages, emails, and photos to help find what you need.
  • Find details like restaurant tips, hotel confirmations, and trip photos.
  • Understand what’s on screen and answer questions about it.
  • Use “Visual Intelligence” in Camera and screenshots.
  • Take actions across apps, including drafting emails and editing or sharing photos.
  • Let you ask about images, files, and text from context menus.
  • Generate, rewrite, and proofread text systemwide.
  • Match punctuation and tone in Mail and Messages based on how you usually write.
  • Save “conversation history” in a dedicated Siri app.
  • Offer more expressive voices and better dictation.
  • Help split bills with Apple Cash.
  • Run across iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, CarPlay, AirPods, and Vision Pro.
  • Work from Spotlight on iPad and Mac.

When will Siri AI be available?

Apple said it will be available in beta “later this year,” starting in English.

Which iPhone models support Siri AI?

The answer is complicated, but here’s my best guess:

  • iPhone 15 Pro and iPhone 15 Pro Max
  • All iPhone 16 models
  • Any later iPhone models

Apple hasn’t provided a supported device list, but its iOS 27 page shows Siri AI requires “an Apple Intelligence-enabled device.” Apple’s support page for Apple Intelligence also lists “iPhone 15 Pro models, and iPhone 16 models or later.” Apple’s iOS page uses similar wording for Apple Intelligence in iOS 27, as well: “all iPhone 16 models and later, iPhone 15 Pro, iPhone 15 Pro Max.”

There are also regional limits. Apple said Siri AI will “not initially” be available in the EU on iPhone and iPad.


Show more





Source link