Valve 将 Steam Deck 价格上调超过 40%,并归咎于成本上升。
Valve hikes Steam Deck prices by more than 40%, blaming rising costs

原始链接: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cz725d5d1x7o

Valve 已宣布大幅提高其 Steam Deck OLED 手持游戏机的价格,涨幅超过 40%。512GB 型号现售价为 789 美元(649 英镑),而 1TB 版本则上涨至 949 美元(779 英镑)。 Valve 将此次涨价归因于零部件(特别是内存和存储设备)成本的上升,以及更广泛的全球物流挑战。此举顺应了游戏行业的整体趋势,硬件制造商正面临通货膨胀以及人工智能数据中心扩张导致内存芯片竞争加剧的压力。索尼和任天堂等公司近期的价格调整也反映了同样的经济压力。 行业专家认为,内存等核心组件成本的上升可能会影响未来项目的可行性,例如 Valve 备受期待的“Steam Machine”游戏电脑,这可能导致生产延误或重新考虑发布策略。此消息引发了玩家们的失望情绪,也进一步凸显了在当前硬件市场中保持价格亲民所面临的持续挑战。

Valve 已将 Steam Deck 的价格上调了超过 40%,理由是生产成本上升,尤其是受人工智能硬件需求推动,内存和存储组件的价格大幅上涨。 这一公告在 Hacker News 上引发了截然不同的反应。许多用户为这一举措辩护,指出在索尼、微软和任天堂早已提高硬件价格的背景下,Valve 是最后几家涨价的公司之一。他们认为,与行业巨头相比,Valve 的制造规模较小,使其更容易受到组件价格波动的影响。 然而,另有许多人认为新的价格点让这款设备变得“毫无竞争力”,一些人将其与 MacBook Air 或 Framework 笔记本电脑等性能更强的计算硬件的成本进行了比较。批评者认为,此次涨价预示着 Steam 生态系统的未来令人担忧,并可能导致未来硬件(如传闻中的 Steam Machine)的入门价格更高。尽管存在抵制声音,但有报道显示,剩余库存仍被迅速抢购一空,这表明对于深度投入 Steam 游戏库的用户而言,无论成本如何,该设备仍然具有很高的购买价值。
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原文

Valve hikes Steam Deck prices by more than 40%, blaming rising costs

Laura CressTechnology reporter
Valve A white OLED Steam Deck on a blue background, turned on with different game titles on the screenValve

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 512GB tier of its OLED handheld gaming PC - the newer model with an upgraded display – will now cost $789 (£649, €779), an increase of 43% or £170. The larger 1TB model will cost $949 (£779, €919), an increase of 46% or £210.

In a blog post, the gaming giant 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," posted one disappointed gamer.

The Steam Deck OLED was officially launched on 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 if buying from the firm.

These newer models had been out of stock for months before Valve's announcement.

The Steam Controller, a gamepad, in charcoal black, with a four-way direction button, two thumbsticks, two trackpads, and various other buttons, held in a person's hand
Valve recently showcased its dedicated Steam Controller with an £85 price tag

The increase from Valve 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.

It recently launched its version of the Steam Controller, an official pad by which to play its games, which also divided gamers over its £85 price.

Chris Scullion, deputy editor of Video Games Chronicle, told the BBC increases of components such as Ram meant the Steam Machine "could end up being so expensive to manufacture that Valve might even reconsider releasing it at all", or the company might wait "until the situation is hopefully resolved".

Industry hikes

The industry has seen several increases across hardware and subscription prices recently, with companies frequently citing hardware tariffs, ongoing inflation and shortages of Ram - a type of memory chip used in computing devices.

Ram price has also gone up because of the explosive growth in the data centres which power AI and which need the chip too.

In March, Sony raised the price of the PlayStation 5 by £90 in the UK and by $100 in the US, which it said was due to "continued pressures in the global economic landscape".

In the same month it also increased the cost of its PlayStation Plus subscription service in some regions, citing "market conditions".

Nintendo also announced the price of the Switch 2 will increase globally from September, rising from $449.99 to $499.99 in the US, and €469.99 to €499.99 in most European countries. it said a revised price for the UK - where a Switch 2 currently costs £395.99 - would be confirmed at a later date.

Xbox recently went against the trend by lowering the price of its Game Pass subscription service - at the cost of dropping day-one access to new Call of Duty games.

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