Valve unveils Steam Machines, a hardware beta for its living room game console

Valve unveils Steam Machines, a hardware beta for its living room game console

Valve announced Steam Machines today, a living room game console that launches at some point in 2014. The company also announced a hardware beta for its own version of the console; the beta starts this year. Today’s news is the second of three planned announcements this week meant to expand the company’s digital game distribution service, Steam. The company’s issuing just 300 hardware prototypes in 2013 — “free of charge, for testing” — and you can enter to become one of those lucky 300 through your existing Steam account (an “eligibility quest” was added to Steam’s quest page that will guide you through the process).

Valve says that a variety of “Steam Machines” — the new name for the company’s “Steambox,” a living room gaming console for playing PC games — will become available next year “made by different manufacturers,” including Valve itself. The hardware beta, which we first told you about many moons ago, only includes Valve’s version of the Steam Machine. All the machines will run SteamOS, the operating system that’ll power Valve’s big living room push (it was announced earlier this week). There aren’t any specs given for the various devices. Valve says that, since there will be a few different options, there’ll be “an array of specifications, price, and performance” when we learn more “soon.” It sounds like the 300 beta testers can share their experience with the rest of us, though, as Valve’s asking for loud, public feedback.

Apparently the beta will include “the nearly 3,000 games” that are available on Steam including the “hundreds already running natively on SteamOS.” Everything else is streamable, says Valve. In terms of using a mouse-and-keyboard setup in your living room, Valve says that’s an option, but “we have some more to say very soon on the topic of input.”

Filed under: , ,

Comments

Here’s how SteamOS destroys Microsoft

This week the gaming-centric company known as Valve has announced plans to release SteamOS, a living room-aimed operating system that will be free to download and free to license. This operating system is based on Linux architecture – similar to how Android is a Linux-based OS – and the company intends on expanding well beyond […]

Valve Teases SteamOS, a Free Operating System for Living Room Gaming

Ben Heck’s Steam box will soon be a legitimate Steam Box. The avid PC gamer can build his Steam Box, the console gamer will be able to buy a Steam Box, everyone can have a Steam Box! That’s all in the near future – hopefully not in Valve Time – with the announcement of SteamOS, a free Linux-based operating system “designed for the TV and the living room.”

Valve steamOS 620x609magnify

According to the teaser page, Valve has progressed far enough with SteamOS Valve to have “achieved significant performance increases in graphics processing”, and now they’re working on “audio performance and reductions in input latency at the operating system level.” Valve also claims that developers are already working with the standalone operating system, with “hundreds of great games” already running natively on SteamOS. In the event that your favorite game doesn’t have a SteamOS version, Valve says you’ll be able to stream a game from a PC or Mac running the Steam client to the machine running SteamOS.

Valve also said that they’re working with media providers to tie in to Steam and SteamOS. Add in Big Picture mode, cloud syncing and the propensity of Steam to drop prices like it’s hot and you could have an all-conquering entertainment machine.

Can Valve finally bring about the rise of the PC-console hybrid? A machine with the idiotproof user interface of a console, but with the futureproof software and hardware options of the PC? Is Valve saving Half-Life 3 for the SteamOS? The bastards?

[Steam via Joystiq]

Daily Roundup: Surface Pro 2 hands-on, BlackBerry sold for $4.7 billion, Apple sells nine million iPhones, and more!

DNP The Daily RoundUp

You might say the day is never really done in consumer technology news. Your workday, however, hopefully draws to a close at some point. This is the Daily Roundup on Engadget, a quick peek back at the top headlines for the past 24 hours — all handpicked by the editors here at the site. Click on through the break, and enjoy.

Comments

SteamOS Music, TV, Movie deals imminent: Valve’s big media bid

Mentioned almost as a footnote in today’s release on their larger SteamOS headline, Valve has let it be known that they’re entering into deals for multimedia delivery as well. Speaking on music, TV, and movies specifically, Valve has suggested that both SteamOS and Steam – the software client you use on your Windows, Mac, or […]

SteamOS Announced By Valve

SteamOS Announced By Valve It was just last week when we brought you word that the good people over at Valve have launched a teaser website, which will rekindle speculation concerning a Steam Box. Well, it seems that all those rumors can be put to bed now, as Valve has just announced not a Steam Box, but rather, SteamOS. SteamOS will be able to, theoretically speaking, transform any living room PC hardware into a Steam Box.

SteamOS will be based off of Linux, making it a free operating system which was specially optimized for gaming purposes on TVs. Similar to Linux, SteamOS will arrive with a philosophy of “openness”, so that users with the technical know how and ability are able to change the software as well as hardware according to their whims and fancy. Apart from that, it will also be able to stream any Windows/Mac games from your PC onto your SteamOS machine, making it all the more attractive. Other than “In-Home Streaming”, SteamOS will also feature a trio of other features, among them include “Music, TV, Movies,” “Family Sharing,” and “Family Options”.

Valve claims that SteamOS will bring “significant performance increase in graphics processing.” Will that be true? Only time will tell, so what are you waiting for?

  • Follow: Gaming, steamos, ,
  • SteamOS Announced By Valve original content from Ubergizmo.

        



    SteamOS revealed: Valve head to living room machines with Linux base

    It would appear that Valve is opening the doors to the living room experience for Steam with a new operating system they’re simply calling SteamOS. This operating system is based in Linux and will be “downloadable soon” and “free forever”, just as the Steam client for Windows, Mac, and Linux machines is now. This operating […]

    Steam’s Got Its Own Operating System Now

    Steam's Got Its Own Operating System Now

    After a forever-long countdown to a three-tiered announcement, Valve has rolled out phase one of its plan to take over your living room: SteamOS.

    Read more…


        



    Valve announces SteamOS, a new platform for playing PC games on TVs

    PC game service operator and game development studio Valve announced SteamOS this afternoon, finally formalizing a PC gaming hardware project known as “Steambox” we’ve heard dribs and drabs about over the past few years. The OS will function on “any living room machine,” and it also streams games from your Mac and PC, as well as offering media playback functionality. The OS seems to be multifunctional in this aspect, both acting as an operating system for living room-based machines directly connected to televisions, and offering streaming capability from computers outside the living room. “Just turn on your existing computer and run Steam as you always have – then your SteamOS machine can stream those games over your home network straight to your TV,” the announcement page says. The OS is free and built on Linux; it will be available “soon.”

    Valve says it’s “achieved significant performance increases in graphics processing, and we’re now targeting audio performance and reductions in input latency at the operating system level,” with regards to streaming capability. “Game developers are already taking advantage of these gains as they target SteamOS for their new releases.” No specific developers are named, but a job posting from Crytek points at one suspect.

    The project is intended to compete with traditional game consoles, and it seemingly evolves Steam’s “Big Picture Mode” to that end (which isn’t to say that service is going away). Valve specifically lists four new features as the pillars of SteamOS: in-home streaming, family sharing, music / TV / movies, and family options. Let’s dive into those after the break.

    Filed under: , ,

    Comments

    Source: Valve

    Valve Launches Teaser Website, Rekindles Steam Box Speculation

    Valve Launches Teaser Website, Rekindles Steam Box Speculation

    Valve has talked a lot in the past about shifting PC gaming to living rooms, it has now launched a new teaser website which promises three separate announcements related to such a shift. Right now, the website contains a countdown clock for the first announcement, its counting down until 10 a.m. PT on September 23rd. Clocks for the remaining announcements haven’t been added as yet.

    Is it possible that Valve might finally be making a Steam Box related announcement? This was first reported a few days ago, when Valve co-founder Gabe Newell referred to Linux as the “future of gaming” at LinuxCon 2013. He also said that the company will reveal more information about the opportunities it sees for bringing Linux to the living room, next week. A representative for Valve reiterated that they’ll be talking about the steps they’re taking to make Steam more accessible on TVs and in the living room. Valve says on its teaser website that this year it has been working on more ways to “connect the dots for customers who want Steam in the living room,” it also says that soon “we’ll be adding you to our design process.” We’re certainly curious how Valve intends to include users in the design process, hopefully it’ll explain in detail come Monday.

  • Follow: Gaming, , Steam Box, ,
  • Valve Launches Teaser Website, Rekindles Steam Box Speculation original content from Ubergizmo.