Valve still hasnât revealed the full breakdown of whatâs inside its new Steam Machine console or how much it will cost. Those details were delayed along with the deviceâs âearlyâ 2026 launch due to an AI-fueled PC part shortage. But the company did offer a fresh clue about how the mini-computer will perform, and it almost sounds too good to be true.
âIn our testing the majority of Steam titles play great at 4K 60FPS with FSR on Steam Machine,â the company wrote in a new update on February 4. âThat said, there are some titles that currently require more upscaling than others, and it may be preferable to play at a lower framerate with VRR to maintain a 1080p internal resolution. In the meantime, we are working on HDMI VRR, investigating improved upscaling, and optimizing ray tracing performance in the driver, so we are approaching this from multiple angles.â
Steam users areâŠskeptical. âI donât see how thatâs possible on many, if not most current AAA games,â wrote one commenter. âThe hardware just isnât there. Isnât this supposed to be a 3050 or lower class device?â Another wrote, âI donât think the hardware is capable of delivering this promise. I have a 12 GB 3060. Which, presumably, is a significantly more powerful GPU than the one being offered. But itâs a still a lower-end GPU and Iâm not playing any AAA games at 4K.â
Itâs hard to know what exactly that means since thousands of new games come to Steam every year and most of them are small indie games that arenât very demanding to run. The Steam Machine might run Hollow Knight: Silksong and Slay the Spire 2 at 4K 60FPS no problem, but what about Resident Evil Requiem and Crimson Desert, both AAA blockbusters coming to Valveâs storefront over the next couple of months? Not to mention all of the games that launched last year with PC performance issues like Monster Hunter Wilds and Borderlands 4.
If the Steam Machine can pull off 4K 60FPS for even some of those big games without too much frame generation or upscaling, it would have a lot to offer not just console players but people coming from lower-end or very dated PC gaming rigs. But it also probably wonât come cheap. Then again, in this new world where gaming gets more expensive every year, whoâs to say what even still counts as âcheap.â
