Valve hikes Steam Deck prices by more than 40%, blaming rising costs
Source: BBC Technology
Valve hikes Steam Deck prices by over 40 %
Valve has announced a price increase of more than 40 % — or nearly £200 — for its two Steam Deck models, citing “rising memory and storage costs”.
The 512 GB tier of the OLED handheld gaming PC — the newer model with an upgraded display — will now cost $789 (£649, €779), an increase of 43 % (£170). The larger 1 TB model will cost $949 (£779, €919), an increase of 46 % (£210).
In a blog post, Valve said the Steam Deck itself had not changed, and the price changes reflected “the current state of component costs and other global logistical challenges across the industry as a whole.”
“There goes my hopes of ever getting an OLED,” one disappointed gamer posted on Bluesky.
The Steam Deck OLED was officially launched in November 2023 as a major hardware revision to the original LCD model. Valve no longer sells its cheaper LCD models directly, meaning customers can only buy the OLED version from the firm. These newer models had been out of stock for months before Valve’s announcement.

Valve recently showcased its dedicated Steam Controller with an £85 price tag.
The increase has left some wondering what it could mean for the price of the company’s anticipated gaming PC, the Steam Machine, which still has no release date or confirmed price. Chris Scullion, deputy editor of Video Games Chronicle, told the BBC that increases in components such as RAM could make the Steam Machine “so expensive to manufacture that Valve might even reconsider releasing it at all,” or that the company might wait “until the situation is hopefully resolved”.
Industry hikes
The industry has seen several price increases across hardware and subscription services recently, with companies frequently citing hardware tariffs, ongoing inflation, and shortages of RAM — a type of memory chip used in computing devices.
In the same month, Sony also increased the cost of its PlayStation Plus subscription service in some regions, citing “market conditions” (BBC article).