HomeGamingValve rejoins the VR hardware wars with standalone Steam Frame

Valve rejoins the VR hardware wars with standalone Steam Frame

GamingNovember 12, 2025
1 min read
Valve rejoins the VR hardware wars with standalone Steam Frame
SteamOS-powered headset sports semi-modular design, wireless "low-latency" PC streaming. ...
Reading Settings

Six years ago, Valve made its second big virtual reality push, launching the Valve Index headset alongside VR blockbuster Half-Life Alyx. Since then, the company seems to have lost interest in virtual reality gaming, letting competitors like Meta release regular standalone hardware updates as the PC-tethered Index continued to age.

Now, after years of rumors, Valve is finally ready to officially rejoin the VR hardware race. The Steam Frame, set to launch in early 2026, will run both VR and traditional Steam games locally through SteamOS or stream them wirelessly from a local PC.

Powered by a Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 processor with 16 GB of RAM, the Steam Frame sports a 2160 x 2160 resolution display per eye at an “up to 110 degrees” field-of-view and up to 144 Hz. That’s all roughly in line with 2023’s Meta Quest 3, which runs on the slightly less performant Snapdragon XR2 Gen 2 processor. Valve’s new headset will be available in models sporting 256GB and 1TB or internal storage, both with the option for expansion via a microSD card slot. Pricing details have not yet been revealed publicly.

Read full article

Comments

Source: Ars Technica

Share this article

Related Articles

Why reviving the shuttered Anthem is turning out tougher than expected
Jan 284 months ago

Why reviving the shuttered Anthem is turning out tougher than expected

Despite proof-of-concept video, EA's Frostbite Engine servers are difficult to pick apart. ...

{"_":"https://arstechnica.com/gaming/2026/01/why-reviving-the-shuttered-anthem-is-turning-out-tougher-than-expected/","$":{"isPermaLink":"true"}}1 min read
Read More
TR-49 is interactive fiction for fans of deep research rabbit holes
Jan 244 months ago

TR-49 is interactive fiction for fans of deep research rabbit holes

Dense narrative deduction game tells a compellingly academia-tinged sci-fi tale. ...

{"_":"https://arstechnica.com/gaming/2026/01/tr-49-is-interactive-fiction-for-fans-of-deep-research-rabbit-holes/","$":{"isPermaLink":"true"}}1 min read
Read More