If you're a sicko, you can now run Windows on the Steam Machine

Valve just dropped Windows 11 Steam Machine drivers, and while I firmly believe stripping the cube of SteamOS is blasphemous, you can now do so with full hardware support. Dual-booting isn't a thing yet, so you will need to wipe your drive to turn the box into something closer to Xbox Project Helix.

Over at Valve's Windows Resources page, you'll now find Steam Machine drivers alongside existing Steam Deck OLED and LCD device controllers. Effectively, you've got downloads for graphics, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and the SD card slot to enable full functionality on Microsoft's operating system, which in theory should help it run like any other gaming PC.

In theory, everything else within Valve's cube should already play nicely with Windows 11 without additional drivers. That includes motherboard elements like USB ports, but there's no guarantee you'll get the same level of optimized performance in games. This is something I've witnessed as players try to swap out SteamOS on everything from the Steam Deck to the Lenovo Legion Go S, but it will grant you wider compatibility with PC storefronts.

Screenshot of Steam Machine Windows 11 drivers on Valve support page alongside dual-booting notice.

(Image credit: Valve)

Yes, there are workarounds to get the Epic Game Store and GOG working in SteamOS. If you do swap things out for Windows, though, you'll be able to easily download games using your Xbox Game Pass subscription, and you won't run into anti-cheat issues when playing competitive romps. As impressive as Valve's Proton compatibility layer is, many of those tools work at a Windows kernel level, and the ones that don't, like Easy Anti-cheat and BattleEye, often block Linux.

I can't see many players permanently swapping out SteamOS for Windows 11 on the Steam Machine right now. In my eyes, this driver drop is in prep for dual-booting, which could honestly make Xbox Project Helix look a little silly if it arrives with just some sort of consolized Windows OS.

Yes, the "Full Screen Experience" has helped handhelds like the ROG Xbox Ally X feel a bit more couch-friendly, but it doesn't remotely hit the same comprehensive console notes as SteamOS. If the Steam Machine gains the required Wizard for dual-booting before the next-gen Xbox arrives, though, it could be pulling all the same tricks while retaining direct access to Valve's PC console hybrid vision.

Hand pressing Steam Machine power button on desk.

(Image credit: Valve)

Valve is already off to a flying start with Steam Machine support, having just also implemented VRAM enhancements via improved memory management. Even that recent scare with one system showing "Red Line of Death" symptoms is now resolved, as leaving it off for 24 hours cleared the GPU bug in question.

Simply put, the Steam Machine is thriving despite its $1,049 price tag, and it's got something of a head start against any other console PC hybrids that plan on showing up. The next Xbox will almost certainly be that, and releasing Windows 11 drivers ASAP means it'll be more than ready to play Project Helix at its own game.

If you completely swap out SteamOS for Windows 11 right now, though, I will brand you a sicko.

Swing by the best gaming handhelds for portable PCs with a punch.


Post a Comment

0 Comments