this post was submitted on 22 Jun 2026
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Steam Hardware

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Steam machine prices are live (store.steampowered.com)
submitted 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) by gwheel@lemmy.zip to c/steamdeck@sopuli.xyz
 

$1050 for 512gb no controller

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[–] Enzy@feddit.nu 2 points 2 hours ago

Yeah no thanks.

[–] A_Chilean_Cyborg@feddit.cl 5 points 5 hours ago (2 children)

Is surprising to me that nobody has attempted to Luigi a tech CEO yet, Everybody has 10 independent, different reasons to hate AI, lives have been destroyed and yet no Luigi for now.

RIP steam hardware, a revolution repressed by AI slop costs.

[–] Yttra@lemmy.world 1 points 3 hours ago (1 children)

Did it help American insurance?

[–] Lumisal@lemmy.world 1 points 1 hour ago

It actually did save many lives, because the insurance companies essentially okayed everything for a few weeks. There's many testimonials on how many people finally got surgeries or medications they've been needing.

So yeah, Luigi did literally save a bunch of people at the cost of one asshole.

[–] echodot@feddit.uk 2 points 4 hours ago

It wouldn't help. The CEOs are just the idiot figureheads who make dumb decisions, don't be replaced within a day.

[–] llii@discuss.tchncs.de 3 points 4 hours ago
[–] derek@slrpnk.net 2 points 8 hours ago

Pretty machine. Probably not for me, but pretty.

[–] NigelFrobisher@aussie.zone 5 points 11 hours ago

I guess another Thinkpad then.

[–] lukaro@lemmy.zip 7 points 13 hours ago

I wan't to see it compared to some of the less costly mini pc's out there.

[–] savvywolf@pawb.social 32 points 1 day ago

Fuck genAI.

[–] brucethemoose@lemmy.world 37 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (5 children)

I’m surprised people think $1,100 is expensive for a gaming PC, even outside the crazy memory market now.

Same with the $500 Commodore phone.

These are not the 2000s. The dollar has inflated. Technology is expensive. I think cheap junk has desensitized folks to that, but you pay an externalized cost for that stuff.

And of course salaries haven’t gone up so anyone can actually afford it, but… that’s a distinctly separate problem. They should have, as corporate revenue and profit per worker has certainly gone up.

[–] Wilco@lemmy.zip 2 points 9 hours ago

Yea ... I was thinking that is seemed fairly average. I had to replace my kids PC when it went bad. A low-mid tier gaming PC at Bestbuy was $1300, $1600 after I grabbed more memory to put in it.

[–] binux@sh.itjust.works 18 points 21 hours ago* (last edited 21 hours ago) (1 children)

Valve directly stated that they had to reconsider their pricing for the steam machine (i.e. increase it substantially more than originally intended) because of the obscenely inflated costs of components. This isn’t just about the steam machine being “too expensive,” the prices for it are quite literally far higher than they should be, albeit with it being for the most part out of Valve’s hands. It’s far more complicated than consumers being greedy and desensitized.

Source for Valve’s statement: https://www.pcmag.com/news/valve-confirms-steam-machine-will-cost-over-1000-heres-how-to-buy-one

Valve notes that the RAM crunch has impacted pricing. "The overall effect is that our original goal for the price of [the] Steam Machine is no longer viable," it says. "So the prices we're sharing today reflect the state of the world for manufacturing. Or, more accurately, it reflects the price of the components as we've secured them over the past six months."

[–] Hueristic_Autistic@lemmy.world 2 points 18 hours ago

I wonder why they never named it the radiator?

[–] jordanlund@lemmy.world 8 points 1 day ago

Hol, hol, hol up... Commodore Phone? 🤔

Huh, I'll be damned!

https://commodore.net/callback/

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[–] shweddy@lemmy.world 157 points 1 day ago (10 children)

I wonder how much it would've cost if we didn't have a dumb mother fucker in charge and greedy rich bastards weren't hoarding all the supplies

[–] sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com 11 points 20 hours ago* (last edited 19 hours ago)

Let's pick Oct 2025 as our 'pre RAMpocalypse' time frame.

Data source: pangoly.com

(I removed BestBuy because it is an extremely erratic dataset that basically bounces around the average of others, but makes the graph nearly unreadable)

16GB DDR5 Crucial RAM

Oct 2025: ~$50

Jun 2026: ~$275

2TB NVME M.2 Crucial SSD

Oct 2025: ~$140

Jun 2026: ~$300 (if you remove Adorama)

512GB NVME M.2 Kingston SSD

Oct 2025: ~$50

Jun 2026: ~$200


$275 - $50 = $225

$300 - $140 = $160

$225 + $160 = $385

Thus, the 2TB variant has an effective ~$385 upcharge due to the RAMpocalypse.

2TB variant MSRP is $1349, thus it would be ~$964 pre-RAMpocalypse, meaning that the RAMpocalypse % upcharge is ~39.9%


Do the same with the 512GB variant:

$275 - $50 = $225

$200 - $50 = $150

$225 + $150 = $375

$375 effective RAMpocalypse upcharge.

MSRP of 512GB variant is $1050, thus it would be ~$675 pre-RAMpocalypse, % upcharge of ~55.5%


Obviously this methodology is not perfectly correct, but I'd argue its quite reasonable 'napkin math'... you could maybe make a more exhaustive index of all prices of all brands of RAM/SSD in exact performance spec matches to be slightly more accurate, but yeah, roughly, the RAMpocalypse made the Steam Machine, about $380, or 40% to 55% more expensive than it otherwise would have been, depending on 2TB vs 512GB.

Also I guess we are here just assuming Valve is just selling these things basically at cost, neither subsidizing nor gouging the price, in all scenarios, which I am also confident is and always was basically the plan.

Also also, economist brain says:

~50% inflation in less than a year for pretty much an entire segment of the CPI is uh... pretty fucking bad, to use the 'formal' terminology.

[–] nfreak@lemmy.ml 97 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (36 children)

it's not just the one dumb motherfucker in charge, it's practically the entire goddamn government. anyone who isn't vocally outspoken against AI companies and aiming to put a hard stop to their data centers is fully responsible for any and all harm they're currently causing (and the hardware inflation is such a minor part of said harm).

anyway abolish capitalism and send techbros to the guillotines

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[–] Lettuceeatlettuce@lemmy.ml 53 points 1 day ago (3 children)

Wow, my prediction was pretty close. 7 months ago, I predicted that the Steam Machine prices would be $800-$900 for the 512GB model, and $1,000-$1,200 for the 2TB model.

That was in the middle of memory prices going vertical, and I still got down voted to hell by people claiming that they were expecting $600-$800 tops...

Honestly, with how bad memory has become even over the last 6 months, and the increased brutality to the market done by tariffs and the oil supply shock, I'm actually surprised they were able to hit $1,049 for the base model.

The hard truth: It's an acceptable price within a piss-poor market. The harder truth: It will sell out extremely fast and won't restock likely for months.

When Framework announced their new Framework 13 Pro line laptops last month, a lot of people balked at the price. $1,500 was the cheapest pre-built model, and DIY was basically the same price, unless you already had some components. The pricing for higher tier specs easily climbed to $2,000+

Still, they sold out of every model for the first 6-8 batches in a few days, and barely 2 months later, they are sold out to batch 15, with an expected delivery in October.

The K-shaped market is further becoming a reality. The people that have the money to drop on stuff like this, are happily dropping it. And the people who can't afford it are getting left in the dust.

The scumbag oligarchs have created the cyberpunk dystopia, and most of us aren't going to be living up in the shiny skyscrapers...

[–] mnemonicmonkeys@sh.itjust.works 5 points 18 hours ago

That was in the middle of memory prices going vertical, and I still got down voted to hell by people claiming that they were expecting $600-$800 tops...

I was getting really tired of the people that kept insisting that Valve would take a loss on the Steam Machine despite their repeated statements that they weren't going to do so.

At least now they'll shut up about it, though a lot of them are probably the ones getting mad about the actual release price. But that's their fault for convincing themselves.

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