Steam Machine waiting list goes live, starting at £879 with a 512GB SSD

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After much speculation, a lot of which being caused by dbrand's unceremonious reveal of their Companion Cube casing, the Steam Machine is finally available to order. Kind of. Looking at the page on the UK storefront, four different bundles are available.
  • 512GB SSD - $1,049 USD / 1,509 CAD / 1,039 EUR / 879 GBP / 1,609 AUD / 4,389 PLN
  • 512GB SSD + Steam Controller - $1,128 USD / 1,628 CAD / 1,108 EUR / 938 GBP / 1,728 AUD / 4,698 PLN
  • 2TB SSD - $1,349 USD / 1,919 CAD / 1,359 EUR / 1,149 GBP / 2,109 AUD / 5,739 PLN
  • 2TB SSD + Steam Controller - $1,428 USD / 2,038 CAD / 1,428 EUR / 1,208 GBP / 2,228 AUD / 6,048 PLN
Outside of its larger SSD, the 2TB model also includes additional faceplates in red fabric and solid walnut. Those interested in picking up the system can join a wait list now, with the list closing on the 25th of June. From there all entries will be shuffled, and you'll receive an email either confirming that you're in the reservation queue, or that you're on the wait list and that you'll be informed when more units come in. For those lucky enough to get into the reservation queue, the first batch will be shipping from the 29th of June.

You can find a full FAQ below:

Steam Machine FAQ said:
Why a randomized reservation order?
We underestimated customer interest when we recently released the new Steam Controller, and we wanted to create a system that would be less frustrating and more fair for everyone. A launch that starts at a specific day and time tends to reward bots, people with fast internet connections, talented gaming fingers for quick F5/refresh reactions, and those who can schedule their life around that moment. By accepting reservation signups over the course of a few days, without any incentive to be first, we're hoping to take away some of that friction. The longer timeframe also allows us to do some extra validation on the signups to make sure they're real accounts, with only one per household.

Are there any criteria for signing up?
Customers must meet the following criteria to be able to sign up:
  • You must have a Steam account in good standing.
  • You must have made a purchase on Steam prior to April 27th 2026.
  • Limit one signup per household. We will use payment method, shipping address, and other information to eliminate multiple entries.
What if I don't sign up before June 25th at 10 a.m. Pacific?
After the one-time randomization at that time, anyone who signs up will be automatically added to the back of the waitlist.

Do I have to pick a specific model at signup?
If you care about getting any available Steam Machine model, more than any specific one, you're welcome to sign up for multiple models. Each model has its own list of sign-ups that will be randomized on June 25th at 10am. After that, if you are assigned a reservation queue spot for one or more models, you'll automatically be allocated a reservation for the highest end one you're in, and removed from all the others. If you didn't get a reservation spot for any of the models you signed up for, you'll be placed on the waitlist for the model that you were closest to the front of.

Are these sign up lists separated by region?
Yes, there are separate lists for each shipping region – North America, United Kingdom/European Union, and Australia. You'll be automatically placed in the lists for the region you're in.

I received an email that I’m in the reservation queue, what does that mean?
It means you have a Steam Machine reserved for you. All you need to do is wait, and once we have it ready, we'll send you an email with the option to purchase. You'll then have 72 hours to complete the purchase before we cancel your reservation and move on to the next person in the queue.

When can I expect to get my order email?
We will begin emailing folks in the reservation queue the week of June 29th, in the order they were randomized into. We expect to continue sending these emails throughout the remainder of the year.

I received an email that I'm on the waitlist, what does that mean?
It means that when we did the one-time randomization of the reservation queue, your place in line ended up beyond the number of Steam Machines we'll have in this production run. As we work our way through the queue, some customers may cancel their reservations. If that happens, you may be moved up in the reservation queue, and you'll be notified via email that you have a reservation after all. But if not, nothing about your position in the waitlist changes, and any future production runs of Steam Machines will be offered to customers in order they're on the waitlist.

Can I change which model I reserved?
Once the randomization has occurred on June 25th, and you’ve received your reservation or waitlist email, you cannot change the Steam Machine model you have signed up for. Canceling a reservation or leaving the waitlist will release your spot.

What if I’m in Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, or Hong Kong?
Visit Komodo, our official distributor in those regions, to learn how to order in Japan, Taiwan, and Hong Kong. Steam Machine will not be shipping in South Korea.

Is this the Valve console?
We think of Steam Machine as an extension of PC gaming, not as a console.

The traditional console model is to sell hardware at a loss and make up the revenue with subscription services or by selling games that are locked-in to the hardware. We think this can make sense for a single business in the short term but that open ecosystems are better for customers over the long term. PC gaming's history proves this: The openness of the PC gaming space has enabled it to be the primary driver of hardware and software innovation for decades.

The strength of PC gaming is the ability to play the games you want on the hardware you want. Steam Machine is *a* solution to these problems (and we think it's a great one), but it's not the only solution, and we don't want it to be.

If I don't get a Steam Machine right away, is there anything else I can do?
Thanks to the openness of the PC platform, there are lots of options for devices that will allow you to run games natively or streamed to your TV. There are many PC sites and communities out there that can help you with that. For our part, we are continuing to work toward enabling SteamOS to be used on more hardware than just ours. In fact, with the newly-released SteamOS 3.8, you can run the same code and operating system as Steam Machine on your own living-room PC using whatever PC parts you want:

https://help.steampowered.com/en/faqs/view/65B4-2AA3-5F37-4227 . Right now, only AMD GPUs are supported, but we're working on expanding support for the future.

You can find the Steam Machine listing on Steam linked below.

:arrow: Source
:arrow: Steam Machine (Steam)
 
Sony published a QVL for the PS5 in regards to NVMe, I imagine Valve will publish one for memory. If they don’t, they’re incompetent.

Unless I missed something, I'm not seeing a QVL for the PS5, only basic requirements.

Valve for the Steam Deck literally made a video where they said they don't recommend opening it up whilst doing a disassembly how to and AFAIK never made a QVL for SSDs.

So I'm expecting something similar for the SM.

I've also seen Laptop OEMs release service guides but not a QVL (at best specific part numbers) which was annoying when trying to find RAM which didn't need XMP/EXPO to reach their advertised speeds.
 
How embarrassing for the 250 people who were able to pre-order one of these overpriced, underperforming, and virtually unupgradeable boxes.
Haven't seen the video, but doesn't that mean that there's a free RAM slot? If anything, it makes it MORE upgradeable (if it had 2x8GB RAM, you would essentially need 2x16 GB anew). :unsure:

EDIT: nevermind. Already pointed out.
 
Unless I missed something, I'm not seeing a QVL for the PS5, only basic requirements.
Pretty sure they posted a list of compatible drives from specific vendors on their blog back when PCIe Gen 4 were still somewhat exotic, mostly to account for heatsink heights. Nowadays you can throw just about any Gen 4 drive at it and it’ll work so they probably don’t bother anymore. I’d have to search for it, but I remember them recommending the WD ones since they were the first to get certified. Regarding SSD’s for the Steam Deck, yes, they never recommended replacing the drive in any capacity because it wasn’t designed to be user serviceable - it’s under a heat shield and wrapped in ESD shielding. From what I understand this isn’t the case with the Steam Machine, but if you’re right then users have doubly no reason at all to pester them about compatibility. I don’t *think* that’s the plan or they’d simply solder the memory on, or include a single slot instead of two.
 
Yes and no - single channel can be advantageous depending on your implementation - are you going for bandwidth or clock and timings? I assume the Steam Machine is using it’s on-board memory as VRAM in which case single channel can make sense in certain scenarios.
Well of course you are wrong. There is NO advantage to single channel and the VRAM is separate, not shared. Stop assuming things. It's easy enough to verify using Gemini, ChatGPT or the other essential AI services that make our lives better daily.
 
Well of course you are wrong. There is NO advantage to single channel and the VRAM is separate, not shared. Stop assuming things. It's easy enough to verify using Gemini, ChatGPT or the other essential AI services that make our lives better daily.
You’re wrong. Dual Channel only improves bandwidth, at the cost of timings and sometimes clock - any RAM overclocker will tell you that. If that wasn’t the case, performance growth would be linear with Dual Channel performing twice as well in all applications - it doesn’t, the boost in overall performance is 17%, give or take, because the sticks in dual channel must run synchronised. A Dual Channel setup can only run as fast as the fastest stick in the pair, and sticks have to wait for each other. When there’s only one stick present, the stick can run full speed ahead, it is only synchronised with the memory controller. Wait until you learn about topology and how two-slot boards perform better than 4-slot ones, your dome will cook.
 

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