Watching the growth of Valve has been fascinating. The Washington-based company has gone from being a well-respected game developer to one of the biggest forces in video games, thanks to the popularity of Steam. Next year, Valve looks to be making a play to cement that position and entice new users into their ecosystem, with some superb-looking new hardware looming on the horizon.

From Steam machines coming back to new VR headsets, 2026 looks to be a huge year for the company, and there are even rumors about Half-Life 3 finally making an appearance. Let’s take a closer look at what’s coming from the PC gaming titan next year.

best PC games – don’t sleep on them!

Daft Punk getting stuck in your head, you’re a better person than I) was Valve’s first attempt to release a ready-built PC, and it was, frankly, dead on arrival.

You may like

Since then, Valve has gone from strength to strength with its hardware. The Steam Deck, Valve’s answer to the Switch, has been a mainstay in my living room and sold millions of units according to industry estimates. Combined with the huge development of Proton, Valve’s compatibility tool for playing Windows games on Linux, and it’s got a much better chance of making an impact this time around.

So, what can we expect from the new Steam Machines? Resembling a small Borg cube, it looks to be attempting to compete with your consoles for space under the TV. Its hardware specs look impressive, too, with Valve boasting that it has “over six times the horsepower of the Steam Deck”, and promising “4K gaming at 60 FPS with FSR”. The current specs that Valve lists on the machine’s page are:

CPU: Semi-custom AMD Zen 4 with up to 4.8 GHz of powerGPU: Semi-custom AMD RDNA3 with a clock speed of 2.45 GHzRAM: 16GB DDR5 and 8GB GDDR6 VRAMStorage: 512GB or 2TB, with both models coming with a MicroSD slot

causing RAM prices to shoot up. The controller will likely cost less than $100, while the Frame will likely be cheaper than the Index, according to Valve.

Despite censorship woes and the terrifying price of RAM, 2025 was the year I fell back in love with PC gaming