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    SummaryValve has raised the price of both Steam Deck OLED models, with the 512GB variant jumping from $549 USD to $789 USD and the 1TB variant rising from $649 USD to $949 USDValve cited "the current state of component costs and other global logistical challenges across the industry" as the reason for the increase, with no hardware changes accompanying the new pricingThe increases are driven by a global RAM and SSD shortage caused by AI hyperscalers, with OpenAI reported to have placed orders for half of all RAM production for 2026 with one of the three major chip manufacturersValve has raised the prices of both Steam Deck OLED models effective May 27. The 512GB OLED now costs $789 USD, up from $549 USD, and the 1TB OLED has jumped to $949 USD, up from $649 USD. The hardware itself has not changed. Valve attributed the increases to component costs and global logistical challenges, placing the Steam Deck squarely inside a wider industry-wide repricing driven by an acute shortage of RAM and SSD storage.The price jumps are significant in absolute terms: $240 USD on the 512GB model and $300 USD on the 1TB. Refurbished options offer some relief, with the refurbished 512GB OLED listed at $629 USD and the refurbished 1TB at $759 USD, but neither softens the broader signal. A device that launched as a genuinely accessible handheld PC has, in the space of a few years, nearly doubled in cost without a single hardware upgrade to justify it.The cause runs upstream of Valve. A global shortage of RAM and NAND flash storage has been building throughout 2026, driven largely by AI hyperscaler demand absorbing manufacturing capacity that would otherwise supply consumer electronics. OpenAI reportedly placed orders for half of all RAM production for 2026 with one of the three major chip manufacturers, effectively crowding out consumer-facing buyers at a structural level. The shortage has already delayed Valve's Steam Machine, a streamlined PC that was slated for a first-half 2026 launch and has since been pushed indefinitely. The Steam Deck price increase is the same problem manifesting in a different product line.The competitive context makes the new pricing harder to absorb. At $949 USD, the 1TB Steam Deck OLED is within range of the Xbox Ally X at $899 USD, a device with comparable performance. The Xbox Ally, meanwhile, has been available for $499, giving the Steam Deck a direct competitor that now undercuts it significantly on price despite a similar performance profile. The Steam Deck also carries the additional weight of being a few years old, a device that already struggles with the demands of newer, higher-end games. Paying close to $1,000 USD for aging hardware is a difficult proposition for anyone not already locked into the Steam ecosystem.The broader implication is harder to dismiss. The Steam Deck's original promise was that serious PC gaming could fit in your pocket at a price that didn't require a premium commitment. That positioning is now under pressure from both sides: the hardware is aging while the price is climbing, and the shortage driving the cost increase shows no signs of resolving quickly. What is happening to the Steam Deck is happening to consumer hardware broadly. The AI infrastructure buildout is not just an enterprise story; it is actively reshaping what everyday technology costs.The updated Steam Deck OLED pricing is live now on Valve's Steam Deck website.

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