When Valve first announced the Steam Machine, Steam Controller, and Steam Frame last year, it was the dinky living room PC that I latched onto. I’ve wanted to hook my PC up to a TV and treat it like a console for more than a decade, ever since I spent a few months living at a friend’s parents who had a home cinema room. The effort of lugging the desktop tower downstairs and plugging all the wires into the projector and surround sound speakers was well worth it to experience the splendour of stomping fascists in Wolfenstein: The New Order on the big screen.
But, in the years since, the balance of reward between enjoying big screen gaming and the efforts of moving the PC to the living room have shifted. My desktop tower is wrapped in a sprawling ivy of cables under my desk. The faff of moving it with anything approaching regularity is just not practical.
When I first caught a glimpse of the sleek matte black edges of Steam Machine, that old want flickered back into life. But with no release date and no idea of price, I looked to another piece of Valve hardware, one I’ve owned for a decade and never got working: the Steam Link.
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Author: 360 Technology Group















