In addition to reviving its “Steam Machine” gaming PC, the American game developer Valve
has unveiled a $999 virtual reality headset it calls “Steam Frame.”
The wireless headset, powered by Qualcomm silicon and due next year, can stream games from a PC or run Windows and Android games locally.
Translation: It can function as a standalone entertainment device.
Valve’s introduction of a new VR headset has been rumored for years after mentions of a device called “Deckard” appeared deep in code libraries in 2021.
The Seattle-area company’s previous production headset, the Index—which also cost $999—arrived in 2019 and required a PC to function.
A lot’s changed in the world of immersive headsets since then.
Though Meta remains the category leader thanks to its (née Oculus) Quest portfolio, Apple has entered the fray (with its Vision Pro) as have Chinese challengers (Xiaomi, XREAL, RayNeo, Huawei).
The Steam Frame should give Meta a run for its money thanks to the device’s ability to natively play a variety of games (Meta uses a closed ecosystem) and its relative plug-and-play nature.
Can Valve’s open-arms approach help it dominate headsets as successfully as digital game distribution? We’ll soon find out.
—AN