VGCollect Forum
General and Gaming => General => Topic started by: gf78 on June 03, 2016, 01:47:20 pm
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http://arstechnica.com/gaming/2016/06/its-time-to-declare-valves-steam-machines-doa/ (http://arstechnica.com/gaming/2016/06/its-time-to-declare-valves-steam-machines-doa/)
Estimates are in and it looks bad. Steam Machine sales in seven months on the market are around 500,000. So much for the PC/console hybrid that was destined to crush console gaming under it's boot. ::)
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I completely forgot about that thing.
Then again, I always forget about Steam.
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It's too bad, definitely a cool concept, I actually have the Syber Vapor "Steam Machine," however, I don't have steamOS, it's windows 10, I also upgraded it and used the remaining parts to build another gaming PC.
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I completely forgot about that thing.
Then again, I always forget about Steam.
this
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I have one of those; but like kingrat, I used it to make a little Windows 10 PC. It made a heck of a little MAME/Emulator machine.
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I have one of those; but like kingrat, I used it to make a little Windows 10 PC. It made a heck of a little MAME/Emulator machine.
That's cool. But the general gist I'm seeing is that even those that bought one use them for a different purpose. As a platform, Steam has failed harder than the Wii U.
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Basically if your game doesn't support linux it won't work; thus limiting the library severely.
The Steam controller and Steam link are nice, but having a machine that's only running steam is kinda dumb. Besides... you can download SteamOS and put it on your own machine anyways. There's basically no incentive to by a branded Steam Machine when you can probably make something better for less.
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I have one of those; but like kingrat, I used it to make a little Windows 10 PC. It made a heck of a little MAME/Emulator machine.
That's cool. But the general gist I'm seeing is that even those that bought one use them for a different purpose. As a platform, Steam has failed harder than the Wii U.
The only reason I bought it was because I needed a computer and it was a decent build for $150 on a facebook yardsale. Then, I dropped an SSD and 4 extra gig of ram. It was cheap, but good little game box.
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I was interested in a steam machine early on- I don't have a steam account and I' m well aware of what I'm missing as a result. Then the info dump for the first dozenish machines hit. *sigh*
The reason I game on console & not computer is because I don't want to have to sit down and study stats for ram/processors/video cards/etc. and figure out what device out of several will give me the best value for my money. Personally, I think there's too many console variants, but at least there I only really to figure out hard drive, pack-in game, and color (for the most part.) Plus, if I get a PS4 game, it'll run in any PS4. No guarantees a specific steam game will run on my steam box. If it's going to be as much work as a PC, I'll just get a PC. Can't say I'm surprised to see other people coming to a similar conclusion.
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The idea of the Steam Machine was kinda cool, but I think it mostly failed by just a severe lack of consistency. Multiple companies make them with varying degrees of pricing and hardware. There was no way that would compete with the likes of buying a Playstation 4 or even a a Wii U, where the branding and everything is distinct and straightforward (Though with Microsoft and Sony looking at new iterations of their systems, this could change).
I just think it gets buried in the varied PC market. No one looks at the Alienware branded Steam Machine and see a Steam Machine, they see an Alienware system. I say all this as someone who uses Steam every day. I have over 200 games in my library and it's what I use to play most new games, but I never expected the Steam Machine to take off. The controller is kinda interesting and I hope to try it someday, but that's all that came out of this venture that seemed okay lol
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I never really understood the "why" factor of it. A friend of mine was stoked about it when they were announced. After seeing what versions were available at what prices. I came to the conclusion that building a same spec PC would be a little cheaper in some aspects. So the entire time these have been a thing. I've been like, why?
Also on Black Friday the Wal-Mart a couple of towns over were selling them for around $250.00. Much like the OUYA it was an idea that sounded awesome in theory.