The Steam Deck is getting seriously tough to snag right now, with availability basically falling off a cliff in many regions.
What started as just a few hiccups in the US and parts of Asia has totally snowballed into a major, worldwide shortage, hitting Canada, Europe, and Japan hard.
Valve has actually confirmed the culprit: a crunch on memory and storage components. This supply squeeze is a direct fallout from the exploding demand for AI data centres, a huge, ongoing trend.
A quick look at Valve’s official store confirms it: the handheld console is totally out of stock in Germany, Austria, Poland, France, and a bunch of other EU nations, plus Canada and Japan.
Interestingly, as of this moment, you can still find stock in places like Australia, the U.K., Hong Kong, South Korea, and Taiwan.
Valve has offered a brief but necessary explanation, noting that the Steam Deck OLED is facing intermittent stockouts in certain areas due to, you guessed it, memory and storage shortages.
The core issue is the AI infrastructure boom. Tech giants and hyperscalers are pouring billions into massive data centres filled with specialised AI GPUs. These systems demand absolutely enormous quantities of high-bandwidth memory (HBM) and high-density NAND storage.
Because AI companies are willing (and able) to pay top dollar, chipmakers are naturally prioritising those massive orders. This inevitably leaves less production capacity for consumer gadgets like the Steam Deck. Essentially, your favourite gaming handheld is now in a direct, high-stakes competition with powerful AI clusters for the same critical pool of memory and storage chips.
The Steam Deck isn’t the first piece of tech to feel this painful pinch. RAM modules and SSDs were hit much earlier, with prices spiking dramatically, sometimes two to five times, compared to last year. Major laptop makers such as Dell, Lenovo, and Framework have already announced price increases that are directly tied to these component cost jumps.
Even Apple has issued a warning that memory constraints will heavily impact its Q2 earnings as the company scrambles to lock down supply. While the Steam Deck might be the first gaming handheld to be impacted this severely, it’s highly probable it won’t be the last if these global supply pressures continue.
Valve’s East Asian partner, Komodo Station, has suggested that market availability in their region might get back to normal by the end of the month.
However, on a global scale, concrete restocking timelines remain frustratingly unclear, giving buyers in affected regions zero certainty. The simple, harsh reality is this: the Steam Deck shortage has worsened significantly, and there is no definite end in sight.
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