Valve confirms RAM shortage is the reason Steam Machine still has no release date or price
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Valve has broken its silence on the Steam Machine delay, confirming that the global memory shortage and resulting price increases are the primary reason the PC-console hybrid announced in late 2025 still does not have a firm release date or price. Speaking with PC Gamer, Valve designer Lawrence Yang said global memory shortages and price hikes will impact basically anything the company makes, and that the team is working to ensure the Steam Machine is still available at as competitive a price as possible despite the higher input costs. Engineer Steve Cardinali added that the challenge hit Valve last minute, suggesting the severity of the RAM crisis escalated faster than the company anticipated when it originally planned the launch timeline.
Valve has maintained that the Steam Machine remains on track for a 2026 release, which means the window is narrowing but the product has not been pushed to next year.Price is only part of the concern driving the extended timeline. Yang also noted that any product release requires having enough stock in warehouses to support a good launch quantity, and Cardinali indicated Valve expects demand to be high. The Steam Deck has been selling out globally due to similar memory supply constraints, and Valve appears unwilling to launch the Steam Machine into a situation where stock runs out immediately and generates negative press around availability rather than excitement about the product. The RAM crisis affecting Valve's lineup mirrors the broader industry situation: reports suggest the same memory shortage could delay the next-generation Xbox and PS6, as console manufacturers across the board are trying to avoid passing the full cost of the supply crunch to consumers through launch prices that could suppress demand.