- Moore’s Law is Dead’s Broken Silicon 319 -Podcast Includes speculation about a steam tire successor and a valve home console
- Valve is rumored to work on both systems, with the console allegedly using AMD’s upcoming zen 6 appu
- Mid -Guest speculates that Sony is working closely with the valve to several tire confirmed PS titles on Steam
It is no surprise that Valve’s steam tires have largely been a success since the launch of 2022, with several configurations available at affordable prices and the popular Steamos at the helm. Now, new speculation suggests that Valve’s plans for a sequel can be greater than we thought.
As reported by NoteBookcheck, Valve was rumored to work on a successor of Steam Deck and a dedicated home console, the latter potentially using AMD’s upcoming Zen 6 APU, the codename Magnus. It is based on speculation and internal leaks from the host Tom and Jimmy Champagne about Moore’s Law is dead (MLID).
Speculation from Jimmy Champagne also suggests Sony, who works closely with Valve in the future, specifically ensuring that PlayStation titles have full support on the steam deck. This is also not long term as Sony has made a clear effort to make its first-party tires verified-and it is clear with games like The last of us part 2 and Good of war ragnarok.
AMD ZEN 6 APU is also reportedly used for either Sony’s PS6 or Microsoft’s Xbox Next-Gen Consoles and is expected to be a strong chip for game performance with 11 CPU cores. When I refer to the prospect of a home console mentions mid: “All I can say is that I was told [years ago] Full stop they are [Valve] Using AMD, it becomes really powerful and they will treat this as a proper consclancing to compete as a console ”.
If this is really the processor used in the alleged dedicated steam home console, it suggests to valve forming up to move cases beyond portability with a handheld.
Analysis: If Sony does not make a native PlayStation handheld, a more powerful steam tire will make
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In addition to the classic Sony PlayStation Portable (or PSP), Sony has not yet made a strong effort to fight on the handheld market. I say this because the PlayStation portal is far from what I want from Sony, as I would much rather have a handheld that can play games naturally instead of streaming them.
While you could say it’s just based on speculation, Sony and Valve have clearly worked closely since a large majority of PlayStation titles on PC go directly to Steam.
As I have mentioned, there is a feeling that Sony is putting extra efforts in optimizing games for Valve’s tire verified system, especially with its nixxes software developers known for great optimization at the helm of PC gates.
I do not see that Sony brings his blockbuster first party titles to PC on the first day, but if it stays with the staggered release venue and it does not bother to create a native hand-held experience, I will gladly settle down with a Steam Deck 2 as an alternative with a more powerful processor for better performance.



