With the Steam Frame set to launch at some point in the summer, according to Valve, we don't have that long until we're expected to see the VR headset on sale. If its recent shipping manifest is anything to go by, we could see it in just a couple of weeks.
As shared by SadlyItsBradley on X, the first Steam Frame imports appear to be arriving in Valve's warehouse in the US. The listing notes five different shipments of VR headsets from Quanta Computing. Given Quanta didn't work on the Valve Index, there's pretty much only one thing this could be referring to: the Steam Frame. It appears to be five different shipments of around 6400 kg each, so 32,000 kg total.
As noted by Bradley, when the Steam Controller was shipped out to the American warehouse, it launched around a month later. Given the huge package size, it seems very likely these are intended to be shipped straight to buyers when the release day arrives, ruling out the possibility of them being testing headsets.
We don't know the weight of the Steam Frame box, but the Frame itself seems to sit just under 450 g. Assuming each Steam Frame box is around 800 g, that would mean this shipment has around 40,000 units.
At the very bottom of the document listing is a note about a "Game Console". This is slightly more ambiguous than the Frame mention, which means it's open to interpretation. The game console here could be the Steam Machine, or it could be a resupply of Steam Decks. The game console package weighs 12,647 kg, which might suggest the Steam Machine, but the Deck did manage to sell out in North America after the price hike.
The first Steam Frame imports arriving in Valve’s USA Warehouses pic.twitter.com/TfEO9SPo0bJune 12, 2026
Either way, it seems like, despite me not quite believing it until now, Valve is sticking to its summer time frame for its new devices. The memory crisis has cast a big shadow over almost all hardware drops, and with both the Steam Machine and Steam Frame needing plenty of memory, their price and release date have remained a bit of a mystery.
The one unfortunate thing here is that even if we get either device in the coming weeks, I'm not expecting the best pricing. The memory crisis has seemingly forced price hikes from Sony, Microsoft, Nintendo, and all manner of custom PC builders, so Valve pretty much has to follow suit to avoid losing a lot of money.
I'm certainly excited to give them a try, but AI sure has taken the wind out of Valve's sails here.