http://www.eurogamer.net/articles/2012- ... n-consolesQuote:
Amid the rumours that Valve plans to enter the hardware market with a Steam Box, Gabe Newell has said gamers will be able to buy a living room-friendly PC package from the Half-Life maker in 2013.
Speaking to Kotaku, the Valve chief said he expects companies to sell PC packages for living rooms next year and that they could run Steam out of the box.
And they will, Newell said, compete with next-generation consoles.
"We'll do it but we also think other people will as well," Newell said. "Well certainly our hardware will be a very controlled environment. If you want more flexibility, you can always buy a more general purpose PC. For people who want a more turnkey solution, that's what some people are really gonna want for their living room.
"The nice thing about a PC is a lot of different people can try out different solutions, and customers can find the ones that work best for them."
The Steam Box was first mentioned by a report on The Verge, which earlier this year reported that Valve was working on a console to be developed in partnership with manufacturers.
The Verge report said the Steam Box would likely launch with a proprietary controller that may allow for swappable components (analogue sticks, etc.). Valve filed a patent for such a device last year.
It also heard that some of these devices - maybe the controller itself - could be (or include) biometric sensors. These could measure heart beat (via a bracelet), skin galvanic response (sweaty hands) and feed that information back into the game. Sources intimated to The Verge that the technology was so good, "You won't ever look back.”
Last week Valve launched Steam's Big Picture mode, which tailors Valve's portal to be used on a telly with a gamepad.
The new mode introduces the "Daisywheel" for more intuitive typing with a controller, and a new web browser has been added as well that can be accessed while playing a game.
Could be bloody good, this.
If Valve could pipe all existing Steam content into the living room in a way that can appeal to new customers, that's a vastly more compelling idea. And with the market shifting towards digital distribution, Steam's laissez-faire attitude to content control, user generated content, and patch distribution gives it a really solid unique selling point that sets it apart from the Xboxen and Playstations of this world. I think there's a real opportunity here, and I think Valve know it.
The OS is a open idea; we all know Valve has been looking at Linux a lot lately, and for Steambox to run Windows would make it vulnerable to Microsoft strongarming it if it started to take a big bite out of the Xbox. I wonder if the plan is for a Transgaming/Wine type layer to run Windows games on it. Lots of people have taken a pass at that over the years without much luck, though.
I think it has to be a mainstream box, with a pretty fixed spec. Modern gaming is strongly driven by online and online is influenced by the platform your mates use, so it needs to be popular with everyone. It has to be small and neat and tidy, which rules out standard PCIe changeable graphics cards and a lot of other user-replaceable gubbins. Basically, I think it needs to be much more a console that happens to play Steam games than a small PC with a Valve logo on the front.
Splinter thread for PC-master-race-versus-console-toting-prole argumnets:
viewtopic.php?style=19&f=3&t=9159