Steam Machine preorder starts at $1,049, and the real trick is not clicking fastest, it’s reserving the right model, watching Valve’s randomized queue, and asking review questions that expose dealbreakers before you pay.
Valve’s living-room PC is available to reserve now, with purchase emails starting Monday, June 29th, according to Tom's Guide. Tom’s Guide also says it will receive a 2TB Steam Machine for review and is taking reader questions through a live Q&A.
For buyers, this is the clean path: check eligibility, pick the right configuration, join the reservation queue, save every confirmation, then use the review window to pressure-test whether the box fits your setup.
Preorder Valve's Steam Machine without treating it like a normal checkout
A Steam Machine preorder is really a reservation first. Valve is putting interested buyers into a queue and emailing them when it’s their turn to purchase.
That matters because this isn’t a standard “add to cart and hope” launch. The reservation system is meant to reduce bots and scalpers, and Tom’s Hardware reports that Valve will randomize the list after the sign-up period closes.
“The overall effect is that our original goal for the price of Steam Machine is no longer viable,” Valve said, according to Tom’s Hardware.
The practical takeaway: don’t wait for the first purchase email to make basic decisions. Decide now which model you want, what you’re willing to pay, and what review results would make you walk away.
For more pricing context, XOOMAR’s Steam Machine Price Shatters the Cheap Console Myth breaks down why the $1,049 Steam Machine framing matters for buyers comparing it with other gaming hardware.
Check the Steam Machine preorder requirements before you try to buy
Before joining the queue, make sure your Steam account is actually eligible.
Tom’s Hardware reports these reservation rules:
- Account status: You need a Steam account in good standing.
- Purchase history: The account must have made a Steam purchase before April 27, 2026.
- Household limit: Valve allows one reservation per household.
- Duplicate checks: Valve may use payment methods, shipping addresses, and other information to remove duplicates.
- Deadline: Reservations are open before Thursday, June 25th at 10 a.m. PT / 1 p.m. ET.
Watch out for one easy mistake: signing up with an account you rarely check. Confirm the email tied to your Steam account, because queue results and purchase windows arrive by email.
Also read whatever purchase terms Valve shows at checkout. At this price, don’t assume cancellation, warranty, or support details. Confirm them before you commit.
Confirm the $1,049 Steam Machine configuration fits your gaming setup
Valve is offering four Steam Machine configurations, with and without the Steam Controller.
| Configuration | Price |
|---|---|
| Steam Machine 512GB | $1,049 / £879 / A$1,609 |
| Steam Machine 512GB + Steam Controller | $1,128 / £938 / A$1,728 |
| Steam Machine 2TB | $1,349 / £1,149 / A$2,109 |
| Steam Machine 2TB + Steam Controller | $1,428 / £1,208 / A$2,228 |
Tom’s Guide says the 2TB + Controller bundle also includes two additional faceplates: red fabric and solid walnut.
Pick based on how you actually play:
- Storage: If you rotate big PC games constantly, the 512GB model may feel tight faster than the 2TB model.
- Controller: If this is going under a TV, decide whether you want Valve’s controller in the bundle or already have a preferred setup.
- Use case: Couch play, desktop monitor play, family sharing, and cloud saves all create different friction points.
- Review trigger: Write down your must-test games before the reviews land.
XOOMAR’s $1,049 Steam Machine Price Dares PS5 Buyers to Blink is a useful companion if your decision starts with price rather than specs.
Use Valve’s official reservation route and ignore the noise
Go through the official Steam hardware page for the Steam Machine reservation. Tom’s Guide links directly to Valve’s Steam store page, where buyers can sign up for the model or bundle they want.
Do this before entering payment details:
- Check the domain: You should be on Steam’s official storefront.
- Confirm the model: Make sure you selected 512GB, 512GB + Controller, 2TB, or 2TB + Controller.
- Check your region: Tom’s Hardware says lists are separated by region, including North America, the United Kingdom, the European Union, and Australia.
- Read the queue language: Reservation status and waitlist status are not the same thing.
Watch out for duplicate strategy. Tom’s Hardware reports you can sign up for multiple configurations, but if you get a spot for more than one, Valve gives you a reservation for the “highest end one” and removes you from the other lists.
Place your Steam Machine preorder without missing the 72-hour window
Once Valve emails buyers in the reservation queue, the clock matters.
Tom’s Hardware reports that customers who receive a purchase option will have 72 hours to buy before Valve moves to the next person in line.
Use this checkout sequence:
- Open the email from Valve and follow the Steam purchase path.
- Verify your configuration before payment.
- Confirm accessories, especially whether the Steam Controller is included.
- Review the final checkout total shown by Steam.
- Confirm shipping information before submitting.
- Save the confirmation page and order number immediately.
Watch out for hesitation. If you need review data before buying, prepare your decision rules now so you aren’t making a four-figure call under a 72-hour timer.
Set up Steam Machine order alerts so Valve’s email doesn’t vanish
The queue system depends on email, so treat your inbox as part of the buying process.
Set up a simple tracking note with:
- Reservation model: The configuration you selected.
- Queue email date: When Valve contacts you.
- Purchase deadline: The end of your 72-hour window, if offered.
- Order number: Save it after checkout.
- Support link: Keep Valve’s support path handy from the checkout flow.
Check spam and promotions folders during the reservation period. This sounds basic, but the whole process breaks if you miss the email that gives you the right to buy.
Ask Steam Machine review questions that produce useful answers
Tom’s Guide says its reviewer is getting a 2TB Steam Machine and will answer reader questions after fully reviewing the hardware. That’s your chance to ask questions that go beyond spec-sheet curiosity.
Good questions are short, specific, and tied to a real setup.
Ask about:
- Fan noise: “How loud is it during a demanding game on a TV stand?”
- Suspend and resume: “Does it wake cleanly into a game session?”
- Controller feel: “How does the Steam Controller handle shooters or strategy games?”
- Storage pressure: “How quickly does the 512GB model become limiting with modern installs?”
- Game compatibility: “Which tested games needed tweaks?”
- Living-room setup: “How long does first setup take from unboxing to playing?”
- PC comparison: “Where does it feel better or worse than a gaming PC connected to a TV?”
Avoid broad prompts like “Is it worth it?” Give the reviewer your use case instead.
Send your Steam Machine questions to the live Q&A the right way
Tom’s Guide directs readers to post questions in the Live Q&A box on its article. If you want the best chance of a useful answer, include the scenario.
Use this format:
- Your setup: TV or monitor, couch or desk, controller preference.
- Your games: Name the titles you care about.
- Your concern: Noise, performance, storage, setup, compatibility, or controls.
- Your decision point: What answer would make you buy or skip it?
Example: “I’d use the 2TB Steam Machine on a living-room TV with the Steam Controller. Can you test suspend and resume with a large single-player game and report fan noise after 30 minutes?”
That beats a rant. It gives the reviewer something measurable to test.
Use the review before you keep or abandon the reservation
The smartest Steam Machine preorder move is to treat the review as a filter, not entertainment.
Compare the review results against your must-haves:
- Performance: Did it handle your kind of games well enough?
- Noise: Is it acceptable in a living room?
- Thermals: Did sustained play expose issues?
- Controller experience: Does the bundle improve the setup or add cost you don’t need?
- Storage: Is 512GB enough, or does 2TB make more sense?
- Total cost: Does the final configuration still feel justified?
Keep the preorder if it solves a real problem in your setup. Drop it if the review exposes a dealbreaker you already knew would bother you.
Your shortest path from reservation to sharper review questions
Here’s the action plan:
- Verify eligibility with your Steam account before the reservation deadline.
- Choose the right model: 512GB, 512GB + Controller, 2TB, or 2TB + Controller.
- Reserve through Steam and watch for Valve’s queue email.
- Save every confirmation if you receive a purchase slot.
- Track the 72-hour window if Valve offers you checkout access.
- Ask Tom’s Guide specific review questions before the review unit testing wraps.
At $1,049 to start, the Steam Machine rewards preparation. The next useful move is simple: write down the three things a reviewer must test for your setup, then submit those questions while the live Q&A is open.
Key Takeaways
- The Steam Machine starts at $1,049, making configuration choice important before committing.
- Valve’s reservation queue changes the launch from a speed-based checkout into a wait-for-email process.
- Tom’s Guide’s upcoming 2TB review gives buyers a chance to evaluate performance and setup concerns before purchase.
Originally published on XOOMAR. For more news and analysis, visit XOOMAR.
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