PC players evidently want an easy way to play their desktop games from the comfort of their couch. Valve’s Steam Controller crashed into gamers’ awaiting shopping carts at 1 p.m. ET / 10 a.m. PT on ...
Aaron McKinley is a writer, blogger, and video game enthusiast with over six years of experience in web content and many more in playing games until the wee hours of the morning. A passion for writing ...
Valve's new Steam Machine was originally slated for an early 2026 launch. The little black cube, which is a compact gaming PC that runs SteamOS, has been a project at Valve since 2013, but it's only ...
Valve’s Steam Machine is shaping up to be a significant development in gaming hardware, aiming to bridge the gap between consoles and custom-built PCs. Designed to integrate seamlessly with Steam OS, ...
Valve has addressed the ongoing delay surrounding its upcoming Steam Machine, admitting the situation has been frustrating internally as supply chain issues continue to impact its 2026 hardware lineup ...
Valve has indicated that it will be sharing new information about the release of the Steam Machine in the near future. Since announcing earlier this year that its much-anticipated streamlined PC would ...
Valve confirmed that its new Steam Controller will retail for $99 USD, acknowledging that the final price is higher than initially planned. The company pointed to increased global shipping costs as ...
Steam Controller, Valve’s next-gen gamepad, is slated to launch on May 4th for $100, although you shouldn’t expect to see a big ‘buy’ button next to Steam Frame or Steam Machine. Speaking to Polygon, ...
While the Steam Machine was initially supposed to come out at the beginning of 2026, the AI-fueled RAM crisis caused Valve to hit the brakes back in February. Even back then, Valve seemed to suggest ...
It’ll cost $99 on May 4th. It’ll cost $99 on May 4th. is a senior editor and founding member of The Verge who covers gadgets, games, and toys. He spent 15 years editing the likes of CNET, Gizmodo, and ...
Dominik Bošnjak is a freelance writer from Croatia. He has been writing about games for as long as he can remember and began doing so professionally in 2010 because an opportunity presented itself ...