Hardware

SteamOS now runs on every AMD handheld, with Valve keeping quiet about expansion

At a glance:

  • SteamOS 3.9 now supports all AMD-powered handheld gaming devices including ASUS ROG Ally and Lenovo Legion Go
  • Valve's quiet expansion signals a shift in SteamOS from being "just for the Steam Deck" to becoming a broader platform
  • The update lays foundational groundwork for Valve's upcoming Steam Machine living room PC

SteamOS 3.9: A Quiet Revolution in Gaming Operating Systems

SteamOS has always felt like Valve's silent rebellion. It's never been loud enough to threaten the status quo outright, but it has always been capable enough to make you question it once you use it. With the Steam Deck, SteamOS became popular all over the world, and almost everyone under the sun with AMD hardware has tried it, or at least thought of doing so. Now with SteamOS 3.9, Valve's operating system is crossing some boundaries and stepping over some invisible frontiers.

The latest update to SteamOS makes it accessible on every single AMD-powered handheld out there, and the most surprising part is how Valve isn't shouting about it from the rooftops. Instead, it's just been a quiet, regular rollout. If you've been paying attention, though, you'll realize that SteamOS 3.9 fundamentally changes what SteamOS is and where it's headed. This update is rather huge for Valve's OS, but it isn't flashy at all. Instead, it's foundational in a way that most updates rarely are.

Beyond the Steam Deck: Expanding the SteamOS Ecosystem

On paper, SteamOS 3.9 brings kernel upgrades, newer graphics drivers, and a more refined KDE Plasma desktop, but the real story goes deeper here. With this update, SteamOS stops being "just for the Steam Deck" and starts becoming something a lot broader. Wider compatibility is the headliner here. SteamOS now runs across virtually every AMD-powered handheld that's worth mentioning, from the ASUS ROG Ally to the Lenovo Legion Go.

What used to require tinkering, forks, or community builds in order to run on these handhelds will now feel intentional, and official. This expanded compatibility represents a significant shift in SteamOS's identity. For years now, SteamOS has existed as a means to an end: a custom OS built to make the Steam Deck viable. Now it's starting to look like the end goal itself—an OS that can (and will) command devices, making users want to shift over to it just as easily as they download an image of Windows from Microsoft's website.

The Steam Machine: What's Next for Valve's Living Room PC

Then, there's the desktop mode, which no longer feels like an obligation that Valve had to fulfill to check a box. SteamOS 3.9 brings with it HDR support, better scaling, and improved external display handling. The one thing all these things have in common is that, together, they lay the groundwork for the upcoming Steam Machine. Valve's second go at a living room PC may have been delayed, but it's certainly coming later this year. When that happens, we'll see much of what SteamOS 3.9 provided as the foundation for the Steam Machine.

I'm rather impressed by how Valve doesn't seem to be rushing things with this, either. They are not aggressively pushing SteamOS everywhere, or forcing an ecosystem lock-in. Instead of spending millions on marketing to let other handheld owners know that they can install SteamOS on their devices, Valve is giving SteamOS a slow and deliberate expansion that feels inevitable now. Once the Steam Machine arrives, whether in 2026 or if it is delayed again, then it won't arrive as a risky experiment at all. Instead, with SteamOS's strong foundations laid out, the Steam Machine will arrive on shelves (and our living rooms) as the natural next step in a plan that's been quietly set in motion.

Why Valve's Quiet Strategy Makes Sense

If you're using a Steam Deck daily, then update 3.9 might feel underwhelming, and that's by design. There is no single killer feature in this update, and it in no way "redefines the experience" overnight. Don't expect any big UI overhauls or addition of features that change everything. That's because in many ways, the Steam Deck doesn't need much updating anymore. It's a solved problem already—the Steam Deck's software stack has matured through dozens of smaller updates that have refined performance and compatibility over the years.

SteamOS 3.9 is still in the preview stage and hasn't yet entered the final stable branch. As such, there isn't much of anything left to fix in the Steam Deck in a way that would feel headline-worthy. What remains are incremental gains like better power management, smoother VRR, and tighter input latency. That's why Valve isn't treating this like a marketing opportunity to toot its own horn. There's no spectacle here, nor is SteamOS 3.9 an attempt to sell more of the Steam Deck. Instead, it's just a handoff that prepares the OS for other devices on the market today, and those that are on the way.

Steam Deck OLED: The Current Flagship

Valve's upgraded Steam Deck features a larger OLED display with HDR support, faster Wi-Fi, and a bigger battery. Plus, this new model is slightly lighter, has slightly faster RAM, and it comes with storage up to 1TB. If you're looking for the ultimate Steam Deck, this is the version for you.

Dimensions: 11.7 x 4.6 x 1.9 inches (298mm x 117mm x 49mm) Brand: Valve Weight: 1.41 pounds (640 grams) Chipset: Custom AMD Zen 2 APU (4 cores/8 threads, up to 3.5GHz boost) RAM: 16GB LPDDR5 6400MT/s Storage: 512GB or 1TB NVMe SSD, microSD card slot

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FAQ

What devices are now supported with SteamOS 3.9?
SteamOS 3.9 now supports virtually every AMD-powered handheld gaming device, including the ASUS ROG Ally and Lenovo Legion Go. This expanded compatibility eliminates the need for users to rely on community builds or forks to run SteamOS on these devices, making it an official and intentional experience.
How does SteamOS 3.9 prepare for the Steam Machine?
SteamOS 3.9 lays the foundational groundwork for Valve's upcoming Steam Machine living room PC through several key improvements. These include better desktop mode with HDR support, improved external display handling, and refined kernel and graphics drivers. These features are specifically aimed at scenarios where the Steam Deck is used in its docked state, which is how Valve is preparing the OS for its transition to the living room environment.
What improvements does SteamOS 3.9 bring for existing Steam Deck users?
For existing Steam Deck users, SteamOS 3.9 offers several incremental improvements rather than headline features. These include better power management, smoother Variable Refresh Rate (VRR) functionality, and tighter input latency. The update also adds proper hibernation capabilities. While these improvements might feel underwhelming to current users, they represent refinements to an already mature software stack rather than revolutionary changes.

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