Half-Life creator Valve will make its own gaming PC that will compete with next-gen consoles from the likes of Sony and Microsoft.
Gaming legend Gabe Newell talked about the company's plans in an interview with Kotaku at the Video Game Awards. While we heard previously that Valve was thinking of releasing an open-source set of console specs for others to play around with (like the Android of gaming), now it seems the company is set on doing it all itself, with a console and software ready to go out of the box. Sony and Microsoft, be worried.
The PC will be designed for the living room, according to Newell. He expects a surge in living room PCs next year, and Valve will be at the forefront.
It's likely to be an Apple-style affair, by the sound of it. Newell said the PC would offer a carefully managed ecosystem that was unlike any other. "Our hardware will be a very controlled environment," he said. "The nice thing about a PC is a lot of different people can try out different solutions. Customers can find the ones that work for them," he added.
Newell didn't say Valve would make its own operating system, but did mention that Steam's Big Picture would feature. Big Picture optimises the resolution of games for HD TVs instead of PC monitors. So Valve most definitely has its sights set on your lounge.
He also said Valve was working on its next-generation engine, which should work with next-generation consoles. "Hopefully that's gonna give us some interesting opportunities on the game side," he said.
I'll say. A gaming PC for the lounge that works with your next-gen consoles? Sign me up. What would you like to see from a Valve gaming PC? And how much would you be prepared to pay? Let me know in the comments, or on our Facebook page.

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anonymous 9 December, 2012 13:27
Over this moron. He bags out MS for the MS Store and ecosystem then expects us to adopt his new ecosystem just because it's Valve/Steam/Newell. Won't touch it with a 10 foot barge pole.
anonymous 9 December, 2012 21:14
@Anonymous
Yeah, because Valve/Steam/Newell is totally known for putting profits ahead of development, gouging indie devs and forcing them to pay ridiculous amounts just to provide updates and new content.
What's wrong with trashing MS's Live store that does just that and favoring a system that doesn't?
anonymous 10 December, 2012 12:17
This has fail written all over it - its trying to be part pc part console without being good at either
Steam simply will not be able to match the economies of scale that Sony and MS can achieve, so even an offering thats as powerful as the PS4/new Xbox will cost more than either of them
I honestly can't see any Devs risking signing any exclusivity deals either, so it cannot compete with the 2 main console brands