Valve has released SteamOS 3.8.0 preview, adding initial support for its upcoming Steam Machine hardware alongside improvements for other devices. The update addresses video memory issues on discrete GPUs, benefiting the Steam Machine's Radeon RX 7600-caliber GPU. Valve still aims for a first-half launch despite component shortages.
Valve's Steam Machine desktop remains delayed by shortages of memory and storage chips, as AI data centers consume much of the supply. This has also left the Steam Deck out of stock. Despite hardware challenges, Valve issued SteamOS 3.8.0 preview on March 20, 2026, introducing “initial support for upcoming Steam Machine hardware” along with enhancements for Steam Deck, third-party gaming handhelds, and PC hardware (Ars Technica, March 20, 2026; TechRadar, March 20, 2026). The update incorporates a new Arch Linux base, updated graphics driver, Linux kernel 6.16, and KDE Plasma desktop environment using Wayland instead of X11. It improves compatibility with recent Intel and AMD platforms, third-party controllers, newer AMD chips like Ryzen Z2 Extreme, and handhelds such as Asus ROG Ally, Lenovo Legion Go, and MSI Claw. A key fix is “greatly improved video memory management with discrete GPU platforms,” resolving prior issues where 8GB GPUs underperformed in SteamOS compared to Windows—a concern for the Steam Machine's 8GB Radeon RX 7600-level GPU. Other Steam Machine-oriented changes include better HDMI audio support, Desktop Mode performance fixes, HDR and variable refresh-rate display support, improved TV scaling, rotated screen handling, and multi-monitor scaling options. Users on SteamOS 3.7 can access the preview via Settings > System > switching to the Preview channel. Valve anticipates launching the Steam Machine in the first half of 2026 but has not detailed pricing or availability.