SteamOS
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| Basic Information | |
|---|---|
| Release Year | 2013 |
| Product Type | Operating system |
| In Production | Yes |
| Official Website | https://steampowered.com/steamos/ |
SteamOS is a Linux-based operating system, developed and maintained by Valve. Despite being a full fledged desktop OS, SteamOS' primarily optimized for gaming. It incorporates many gaming specific tweaks and comes with Steam pre-installed. It is the default OS on Valve's first-party hardware, which includes the Steam Deck, Steam Machine and Steam Frame.[1] Starting from 2025, Valve has been broadening devices to include third-party devices.[2][3]
SteamOS was first unveiled in 2013, with versions 1.0 and 2.0 being based on Debian. These releases showed limited adaption. In 2022, alongside the Steam Deck, Valve announced SteamOS 3.0 based on Arch Linux.
Consumer-impact summary
Incidents
This is a list of all consumer-protection incidents related to this product. Any incidents not mentioned here can be found in the SteamOS category.
Example incident one (date)
- Main article: link to the main CR Wiki article
Short summary of the incident (could be the same as the summary preceding the article).
Example incident two (date)
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See also
References
- ↑ "SteamOS". Steam. 1 Apr 2026. Archived from the original on 31 Mar 2026. Retrieved 1 Apr 2026.
- ↑ Alderson, Alex (2025-05-23). "Valve releases major new SteamOS update with Asus ROG Ally, Lenovo Legion Go and Legion Go S support". Notebookcheck News. Retrieved 2026-04-29.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ↑ Singh, Samarveer (2026-04-22). "SteamOS now runs on every AMD handheld, and Valve didn't even make a big deal about it". XDA. Retrieved 2026-04-29.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)