If you’ve been reading tech articles long enough, you know when wccftech appears; don’t trust a single word.
Rumors denied by Valve
Gonna copy what I said before:
is this trust worthy?
Extasis mentions this guy handledeck as the source
https://xcancel.com/HandleDeck/status/1886501899832021224#m
which links to this video
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NgKzbHIWDK4
which just mentions this article https://www.phoronix.com/news/Mesa-25.0-RADV-RDNA4-State
saying: “by reading this article carefully we can come up to the conclusion that…”
Seems all bullshit.
oh that would be sweet… But before that I really need Steam to rerelease the Steam Controller, loved it but after all this years I lost the dongle 😭
You can update its firmware to use Bluetooth.
Interesting that it uses a dedicated 9070 (ugh that name), rather than being a custom APU, like the other AMD consoles and the deck. That just adds cost and design complexity. You’ve got to package multiple chips, have separate power circuitry for both, have separate memory pools, and a more complex cooling system.
That said, perhaps they’re being cautious - if you can’t sell a lot of them, a custom APU isn’t worth it. It’s also probably much faster to bring to market if you’re using off-the-shelf parts.
E: the source appears to only say Valve is working on 9070 drivers, therefore a steam machine must use a 9070. That’s a bit of a logic jump. For starters, any driver work on the 9070 will improve any other RDNA4 chips (including APUs). Also, Valve has done driver work on plenty of things that they don’t use in their own hardware, from various AMD cards, Intel graphics, and even work on the open source Nvidia drivers - they are gearing up to a general release of SteamOS, after all.
TL;DR: this rumour is almost certainly bullshit.
If you want to sell a Steam console, it has to do 4k pretty well, because that’s what TVs have these days. An APU won’t cut it for that, you’ll need a discrete GPU.
Also, Valve has done driver work on plenty of things that they don’t use in their own hardware, from various AMD cards, Intel graphics, and even work on the open source Nvidia drivers
Valve developers are the main contributors to the RADV Vulkan driver so they’ve done work on pretty much every AMD card that supports Vulkan. So yeah, pretty silly rumour if that’s the evidence.
Surely this just adds cost and design complexity.
I’d say it’s the opposite - it’s just a small form factor PC with off the shelf components
Like I said, it’s likely cheaper if you’re not going to sell many units, but if you can recoup the design costs through selling a decent amount, it can easily become cheaper.
Less in the way of packaging costs, fewer VRMs and other power circuitry, a less advanced cooling setup, and – probably most critically – you only need one pool of memory, not dedicated RAM for the CPU and separate VRAM for the GPU.
you only need one pool of memory
RAM is dirt cheap lately, so I don’t think it would make sense to design entire custom circuitry to save on that
It absolutely would. 16GB of VRAM and another 16GB of system RAM adds up. Plus the other associated costs.
The rumour is nonsense and Valve isn’t making a console with a 9070.
The rumour is nonsense and Valve isn’t making a console with a 9070
Valve isn’t making a console, but independent OEMs definetly are. There were branding guidlines released by Valve some time ago. It looks like Valves plan is to maintain the operating system, while everyone else is making hardware running it.
What the fuck is that controller. God I hate it.
One thing I know about myself though, is my instincts suck and I’ll probably be eating those words before long.
That’s the original Steam controller. Rumor is that Valve is working on a new one which will resemble a Steam Deck without the screen.
It’s the alpha version of the controller (or some mockup). The retail controller doesn’t look quite like that.
Told you my instincts suck
Oh yeah, you’re right. I didn’t look very closely.