Valve announced today that the Steam Deck is finally properly back in stock, but they now come with a much higher price tag. I was wondering how long it would be until it happened, as Valve held off quite some time on it while seemingly every other hardware vendor put their prices up.
In the announcement Valve said "Steam Deck itself hasn't changed; these new prices reflect the current state of component costs and other global logistical challenges across the industry as a whole. We’ll keep you updated if anything changes."
New prices (inclusive of VAT where applicable):
-
Steam Deck OLED 512GB:
- USD $789 (originally $549)
- CAD 1,129 (originally $689)
- EUR 779 (originally €569)
- GBP 649 (originally £479)
- AUD 1,199 (originally $899)
- PLN 3,279 (originally 2,599 PLN)
-
Steam Deck OLED 1TB:
- USD $949 (originally $649)
- CAD 1,349 (originally $819)
- EUR 919 (originally €679)
- GBP 779 (originally £569)
- AUD 1,429 (originally $1,049)
- PLN 3,879 (originally 3,099 PLN)
Those prices are quite a tough pill to swallow compared to the originals, which were pretty great value. That brings the pricing a fair bit closer to more powerful systems from other hardware vendors. Although still nowhere near the price of the likes of the Legion Go 2 (which starts at £1,440!).
What this does is leave me even more concerned on the upcoming Steam Machine and Steam Frame, if we're seeing such prices for the Steam Deck, both are likely to be a bit more than anyone was hoping for.
But, I do hope this means some more developers might look to actually optimise their games further, because hardware to run the latest AAA games is getting crazy expensive. We can certainly hope anyway.
Thank you once again to all the companies pushing generative AI, you're truly destroying everything.
Quoting: Mountain ManYeah right... On that, I agree to disagree.Quoting: MohandevirEdit: I'm curious to know why the price hike is even steeper for canadian customers... Saw a similar phenomenon with the Steam Controller.Ask your prime minister. He's been making lots of questionable decisions that are impacting the Canadian economy.
Quoting: Mountain ManAs a lefty, I think he's been making some questionable decisions, but I'd be fascinated to know what you think are his questionable decisions.Quoting: MohandevirEdit: I'm curious to know why the price hike is even steeper for canadian customers... Saw a similar phenomenon with the Steam Controller.Ask your prime minister. He's been making lots of questionable decisions that are impacting the Canadian economy.
Quoting: KlaasAnd all the bad forced AI translation that you get shoved in your face when you're in...when you're anywhere outside England or its former colonies.Germany
Quoting: GustyGhostI get that your angry about all of this as are a lot of people. But i don't think dunking on people with a 'lower cognitive aptitude' is very fair. Comes off as condescending & elitist.Quoting: StellaAI is aimbotting for the mind. It enables individuals of lower cognitive aptitude to compete with those of the average. All of this AI induced destruction is so that mouth breathers can offload their thinking outside their skull.Quoting: KlaasThank you AI. The prices – like the RPI ones – are horrible.I hope all the AI generated slop was worth it for this.
Last edited by PaldinoX on 28 May 2026 at 12:25 am UTC
Quoting: Purple Library GuyNot sure it's the right place for political debate. This said I think our Prime Minister is doing what he can with what he has been given, considering the context. Not sure what he should do. Bending the knee to... Would have disatrous consequences.Quoting: Mountain ManAs a lefty, I think he's been making some questionable decisions, but I'd be fascinated to know what you think are his questionable decisions.Quoting: MohandevirEdit: I'm curious to know why the price hike is even steeper for canadian customers... Saw a similar phenomenon with the Steam Controller.Ask your prime minister. He's been making lots of questionable decisions that are impacting the Canadian economy.




Anticheat check - which competitive games actually work on Linux?