Daily Guardian UAEDaily Guardian UAE
  • Home
  • UAE
  • What’s On
  • Business
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Travel
  • Web Stories
  • More
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release
What's On

Why I chose the Supernote Nomad over other e-ink tablets

April 25, 2026

For the first time in years, I’m genuinely excited for a new MacBook Pro

April 25, 2026

Old tech keeps coming back because new tech got annoying and we miss simpler times

April 25, 2026

Cool phones are not dead, and this liquid-cooled gaming phone proves it

April 25, 2026

The future of vehicle diagnostics: Powering the EV transition

April 25, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Finance Pro
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Daily Guardian UAE
Subscribe
  • Home
  • UAE
  • What’s On
  • Business
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Travel
  • Web Stories
  • More
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release
Daily Guardian UAEDaily Guardian UAE
Home » Your phone could one day become a real Steam gaming machine thanks to Valve
Technology

Your phone could one day become a real Steam gaming machine thanks to Valve

By dailyguardian.aeDecember 5, 20253 Mins Read
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

What’s happened? In a rare, deeply technical interview, Valve has revealed that it has been funding and guiding major open-source projects to make Windows PC games run properly on ARM chips. For those of you unaware, ARM is the architecture that powers phones, tablets, and many low-power devices, and Valve believes it could unlock a whole new future for Steam beyond traditional PCs and handhelds. The interview conducted by The Verge shows that this is not a side experiment but a long-term strategy that has been quietly building for years. Valve has also been quietly funding Windows-on-ARM gaming projects and encouraging broader industry support, even beyond Linux and SteamOS environments.

  • Valve has been heavily backing FEX, an open-source Windows-on-ARM compatibility layer similar to Proton.
  • The goal is to let x86 Windows PC games run natively on ARM hardware without developers having to redo their work.
  • This same tech already powers parts of the Steam Deck ecosystem through Proton and Linux translation layers.
  • Valve explicitly discussed phones and lower-power ARM devices as an eventual target for PC gaming.

Why this is important: This is the clearest signal yet that Valve is thinking far beyond just the Steam Deck. If Windows PC games can reliably run on ARM, then the same games you play on desktop and handheld could one day run on phones, tablets, low-power laptops, and future hybrid devices with far better battery life and thermals. It’s kind of like what Netflix is doing with bringing PC games to your phone, except that this wouldn’t require any extra effort from the developers.

It also changes the industry math. Today, PC gaming is tightly tied to x86 chips from Intel and AMD. A functional ARM gaming layer opens the door to Qualcomm, MediaTek, Apple-class silicon, and future custom gaming chips. That means cheaper hardware options, fanless designs, and possibly entirely new kinds of portable gaming devices. What’s more is that this is not a cloud-gaming shortcut. Valve’s approach is about running games locally on the device itself. That preserves Steam’s core strength: ownership, offline play, mods, low-latency input, and full fidelity gaming without depending on internet quality.

Valve Branding on the Steam Machine

Why should I care? Eventually, this is how your Steam library could escape your desk and your handheld and land directly in your pocket. If Valve’s ARM push succeeds, you would not need a gaming laptop, a dedicated handheld, or cloud streaming to play PC games on mobile-class hardware. Your phone, tablet, or future pocket console could become a true local PC gaming device, not a streaming client.

It also means battery life, heat, and portability could finally stop being the trade-offs that shrink PC gaming on the go. ARM chips are built for efficiency first. If Valve gets this right, future Steam hardware, or even third-party ARM devices, could run full PC games for hours without sounding like a jet engine. For anyone who games on a commute, on a couch, or away from a power socket, that is a very real quality-of-life upgrade.

A white Steam Deck with the screen turned on sitting on a blue background.

Okay, so what’s next? Of course, one shouldn’t expect a “Steam Phone” announcement anytime soon. Valve has made it clear this is long-game infrastructure work, not a short-term product play. The next real signs will likely show up quietly, in Proton updates, SteamOS improvements, and ARM compatibility breakthroughs long before any consumer device appears. Nonetheless, what this news has done is ensure that the future of gaming seems promising, especially since the rising prices of RAM and SSD mean you won’t be building a gaming PC anytime soon anyway.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Keep Reading

Why I chose the Supernote Nomad over other e-ink tablets

For the first time in years, I’m genuinely excited for a new MacBook Pro

Old tech keeps coming back because new tech got annoying and we miss simpler times

Cool phones are not dead, and this liquid-cooled gaming phone proves it

The future of vehicle diagnostics: Powering the EV transition

The best trick AI can pull is disappear into my gadgets instead of turning into a product

The Samsung Odyssey OLED G9 is 31% off, and a 49-inch QD-OLED ultrawide for $899 is the monitor deal I’d recommend without hesitation

One of the best gaming CPUs ever made just got $60 cheaper: AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D down to $388

BMW debuts color-changing iX3 Flow Edition with E Ink exterior at Beijing Auto Show 2026

Editors Picks

For the first time in years, I’m genuinely excited for a new MacBook Pro

April 25, 2026

Old tech keeps coming back because new tech got annoying and we miss simpler times

April 25, 2026

Cool phones are not dead, and this liquid-cooled gaming phone proves it

April 25, 2026

The future of vehicle diagnostics: Powering the EV transition

April 25, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest UAE news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest Posts

The best trick AI can pull is disappear into my gadgets instead of turning into a product

April 25, 2026

The Samsung Odyssey OLED G9 is 31% off, and a 49-inch QD-OLED ultrawide for $899 is the monitor deal I’d recommend without hesitation

April 25, 2026

One of the best gaming CPUs ever made just got $60 cheaper: AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D down to $388

April 25, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest TikTok Instagram
© 2026 Daily Guardian UAE. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.