The day is here: Wider humanity has gotten its hands on the Steam Machine. Our own Steam Machine review is live, and with it, we've finally got confirmation of the Steam Machine's pricing scheme. The SteamOS-powered gaming box starts at a hefty $1,049.
In its slate of Steam Machine launch announcements, Valve has acknowledged that the price is higher than originally hoped due to the ongoing AI-driven supply crisis in computing components. But it's also provided an explanation for why it isn't subsidizing the Steam Machine's sale price, as videogame console manufacturers traditionally do: It would be a betrayal of Valve's reverence for a free market ecosystem—or at least its idea of one.
In a statement provided to The Verge, Valve said subsidizing Steam Machine hardware "might seem like an easy solution" for bringing prices down, but "it doesn’t align with our beliefs about how healthy ecosystems are built."
"If there’s anything we’re religious about at Valve, it’s our belief that open systems are better in the long run, for ourselves and customers. The openness of the PC ecosystem in particular has enabled it to be the primary driver of hardware and software innovation, because anyone with an idea for a way to do something better was able to take a shot at it."
It's common practice for console makers to strategically sell hardware at a loss, relying on the customer's additional purchases to drive profits. For example, Nintendo is reportedly selling the Switch 2 for less than it costs to produce with the expectation that the loss will be offset by following sales of exclusive game releases that can't be played elsewhere, subscriptions for online services, and accessories.
As a result, while Nintendo might be able to offer its customers a lower entry price by subsidizing the Switch 2, Valve says the practice creates an ecosystem that's ultimately worse for the consumer.
"When companies sell their hardware under cost for competitive advantage, or buy exclusive content for it, they’re doing that to build a more closed system, one where you don’t get to choose what software you want to use," Valve said. "We don’t want that for PC hardware, and we don’t think you should want it either. You shouldn’t feel like you have to buy Valve hardware; you should be able to view it as just one option alongside all the devices for playing games, and select the one that makes sense for you."
Valve reiterated that philosophy in its own Steam Machine launch announcement, where it rejected characterizing the Steam Machine as a console due to the associated connotations of a closed-off ecosystem.
"The traditional console model is to sell hardware at a loss and make up the revenue with subscription services or by selling games that are locked-in to the hardware. We think this can make sense for a single business in the short term but that open ecosystems are better for customers over the long term," Valve said in the Steam news post. "PC gaming's history proves this: The openness of the PC gaming space has enabled it to be the primary driver of hardware and software innovation for decades."
While Valve does have a bent towards promoting open ecosystems—its contributions to the general viability of Linux gaming through Steam Deck and SteamOS development being a strong example—we shouldn't necessarily accept its posture of libertarian benevolence at face value.
It is, after all, the operator of a platform that many developers characterize as having a monopoly over PC game distribution, through which it demands a 30% commission on game sales—a higher percentage than its competitors. While Valve claims to champion an open market, its higher commission fees aren't without implications for consumers: The sustainability of a game development project is a much different question for developers and publishers when accessing the vast majority of PC gaming customers, who rely on Steam as their primary or exclusive source of games, means losing almost a third of your sales in platform fees. If that percentage was lower, the selection of games on Steam would likely look very different.
I can accept the business strategy of not wanting to sell computer hardware at a discount. But when we're told it's for our sakes, it's best to treat the claim with a healthy amount of skepticism.

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