

Of the three prongs of the Steam Universe initiative, the Steam Link was in turn easily the most successful. Valve kept the box simple – it was little more than an H.264 decoder with network connectivity and a Bluetooth adapter – allowing it to be small and cheap. The Steam Link in turn was a relatively simple and low-cost set-top box that served as a remote streaming endpoint gamers could use it to see what Steam was seeing on their PC, and then remotely play their games. This initiative included the SteamOS Linux distribution, Steam Machines running SteamOS, and then the Steam Link. Initially released back in November of 2015, the Steam Link was part of a multi-pronged Valve effort dubbed “ Steam Universe” that focused on getting Steam and its games on to living room TV screens. Now the company is announcing that they have wrapped up production of the Steam Link, with the streaming box already out of stock in Europe and most of North America. And while the device definitely made an impression upon its launch, the writing has been on the wall for some time now that Valve hasn’t been completely satisfied with the hardware.

First launched mid-decade, Valve’s Steam Link was one of several local game streaming products to hit the market, allowing users to play PC games away from their PC by streaming its contents to another room.
