Posted September 04, 2012
The post continues, adding that Valve is interested in creating new user experiences. “Even basic input, the keyboard and mouse, haven’t really changed in any meaningful way over the years,” it says. “There’s a real void in the marketplace, and opportunities to create compelling user experiences are being overlooked.”
Sounds like they might not be jumping in the deep end with a full on console or critical hardware, but instead going for the periphery market. Keyboards, mice, game pads etc... might be their primary focus early on. It could be a neat earner for them. If they went console direction - eh - I just don't see it. That is a hard market to break into now with the PS3 and XBox dominating the field. If they could break into that market they would need to have a slew of developers on board to have a powerful release into the field with a great opening of games. Not impossible, but certainly would drain resources and could fail utterly if they don't have the on release titles to their name.
PC hardware side - eh - they could try to compete with Alienware and go for full custom builds and computer hardware of their own. A big step, but I would argue more in line with the company and its current features and services than jumping ship to the console market. Plus fairly light competition with only Alienware really being the big "Games machine" making company.