Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. News

This AMD mini PC beats Valve’s Steam Machine, but it costs a lot more

SteamOS on this AMD mini PC delivers higher frame rates than Valve's hardware

Add as a preferred source on Google
AMD Ryzen AI Max+ 395 Strix Halo
AMD Ryzen AI Max+ 395 Strix Halo ETA Prime

Valve’s decision to officially support SteamOS 3.8 on standard gaming PCs has opened the door to an entirely new class of Steam Machines – without requiring gamers to buy Valve’s own hardware. Now, a new benchmark from YouTuber ETA Prime suggests that a high-end AMD-powered mini PC can outperform Valve’s upcoming Steam Machine by a comfortable margin. The only problem? It also costs several times more.

The testing highlights both the flexibility of SteamOS and the growing appeal of AMD’s latest integrated graphics, but it also raises an important question: how much extra performance is actually worth paying for?

SteamOS proves it isn’t limited to Valve’s hardware

With the release of SteamOS 3.8, Valve has made its Linux-based gaming operating system available for compatible desktop PCs, particularly those powered by AMD hardware. While Nvidia support is still evolving, SteamOS now allows users to build their own console-like gaming PC without relying on Valve’s official hardware.

Recommended Videos

ETA Prime recently demonstrated that potential by installing SteamOS 3.8.14 on a mini PC powered by AMD’s Ryzen AI Max+ 395 processor. The chip combines 16 Zen 5 CPU cores, 32 threads, and an integrated Radeon 8060S GPU with 40 RDNA 3.5 compute units, making it substantially more powerful than the semi-custom AMD processor inside Valve’s Steam Machine, which reportedly uses a 6-core Zen 4 CPU and an RDNA 3 GPU with 28 compute units.

To maximise graphics performance, ETA Prime allocated 96GB of the system’s shared memory as VRAM, leaving 31GB available for system memory. The performance gains were evident across multiple titles tested using native rendering with no upscaling. In Shadow of the Tomb Raider, the Ryzen-powered system averaged 138 FPS at 1080p versus 118 FPS on the Steam Machine. At 1440p, it achieved 103 FPS compared to 86 FPS, while at 4K it reached 62 FPS, outperforming Valve’s hardware by 41 percent.

The trend continued in Cyberpunk 2077, where the mini PC averaged 84 FPS at 1080p, 52 FPS at 1440p, and 27 FPS at 4K, compared with 74 FPS, 45 FPS, and 18 FPS on the Steam Machine, respectively. Similar improvements were recorded in Horizon Zero Dawn Remastered, with the AMD system delivering 72 FPS at 1080p, 56 FPS at 1440p, and 32 FPS at 4K, maintaining a consistent lead over Valve’s hardware.

However, those performance gains come at a steep price

The configuration used in the demonstration costs roughly $3,999, compared to the Steam Machine’s starting price of $1,049. Spending nearly $3,000 more for frame-rate improvements of 15 to 50 percent will be difficult to justify for most buyers.

There is a more practical alternative. Systems such as the GMKtec EVO-X2 AI Mini PC, which also uses the Ryzen AI Max+ 395, are available for around $1,999. While that model includes 64GB of LPDDR5X memory, preventing users from allocating the same 96GB of VRAM used in ETA Prime’s test, the limitation is unlikely to have a major impact on gaming. Even the most powerful consumer graphics cards today rarely require more than 32GB of VRAM.

The benchmark ultimately highlights the broader significance of SteamOS 3.8. Valve is no longer asking gamers to buy a Steam Machine—they simply need compatible hardware. As SteamOS matures and hardware support expands, particularly for Nvidia GPUs, gamers may have far more choice in building their own console-like gaming PCs without being tied to a single manufacturer.

Moinak Pal
Moinak Pal is has been working in the technology sector covering both consumer centric tech and automotive technology for the…
Dell’s new Alienware monitors are brighter, sharper, and cost less than expected for OLED upgrade
This 34-inch QD-OLED curved gaming monitor is much cheaper than expected
Alienware OLED gaming monitor on a desk

OLED has been one of the clearest upgrades gaming monitors have received in years, but the problem has always been the price. Cutting-edge OLED gaming monitors have mostly lived in enthusiast territory, especially if you wanted a panel larger than 30 inches. Dell’s Alienware is now making that jump a little easier with its new 34-inch ultrawide QD-OLED gaming monitor, the AW3426DW.

The monitor was first shown at CES 2026 and is now available as part of Alienware’s 30th-anniversary lineup, alongside two more affordable VA models. At $799.99, the AW3426DW is still expensive, but for a 34-inch ultrawide with a 5-stack Penta Tandem QD-OLED panel, the price is lower than expected.

Read more
Criterion says Burnout isn’t forgotten… but that’s exactly what worries me
Battlefield's success makes EA's decision easy to understand, but it also leaves a huge hole in arcade racing.
Burnout Paradise Remastered Featured

As part of its recent interview with IGN, Criterion reflected on its 30-year journey, from Burnout and Need for Speed to helping revive Battlefield. The studio made it clear that Burnout remains an important part of its identity, but it also acknowledged that its future now lies firmly with Battlefield. Fittingly, Criterion's new 30th anniversary logo proudly carries the tagline: "Criterion: A Battlefield Studio."

On paper, that makes perfect sense. Battlefield 6 has already become one of EA's biggest success stories in years. It revived a franchise many had written off, delivered the biggest launch in Battlefield history, and reminded everyone why the series was once Call of Duty's fiercest rival. As a Battlefield fan, I genuinely couldn't be happier. As a Burnout fan, though? That realization stings a little.

Read more
My favorite multiplayer survival sandbox is finally getting the mobile port it deserves
Don’t Starve Together comes to iOS and Android on July 21
Person, Face, Head

Don’t Starve Together is finally coming to iOS and Android on July 21, and this one has me genuinely excited. I have spent a lot of time with the PC version, and it remains one of my favorite multiplayer survival sandbox games because of how quickly a normal session can turn into complete chaos.

Klei Entertainment’s gloomy, strange, and unforgiving survival game is being ported to mobile by Playdigious. Preorders and preregistrations are live now, and the game is available at a 10 percent launch discount, bringing the price down to $8.99 from the usual $9.99.

Read more