All in all, I think it has massive potential. If Valve use that potential wisely, it'll be nothing short of a revolution. Minus the bit where people get off the sofa.
PROJECT BIGFOOT
What it is:
- Small
- Simple to use
- Free to modify (install your own programs)
- A computer
What it isn't:
- A console
- A new platform
- Useful without an internet connection
- A particularly powerful computer
If you're a PC user: The only impact is that Steam will be getting a lot of updates in the lead-up to release, more of the gaming social network they're trying to build. Future developers will be more inclined to develop for PC.
If you're a console user: The impact is that you can now play PC games. Without having to learn anything, nor change your life (or posture. Hi, OANST!) in any way. That's all. Buy this box, and your games library is immediately expanded by four or so free-to-play titles and as many others as you feel like buying.
Valve are doing everything they can to keep costs down. The price of PCs is restrictive to many. Think Rasberry Pi, or '80s air travel; lowering the price barrier is an achievement in itself. There probably won't be a CD drive, though I expect it'll have USB. This reduces the need for cooling systems. The box gets smaller and cheaper. Valve use the project's potential and their god-like influence in the PC industry to get components cheaply (nVidia are already on board - and on the motherboard hohoho).
So what makes this better than just buying another cheap PC for your living room? To me, not that much. A PC can do everything that the Steam Box supposedly can, and more. But then, that's also true of an XBox. People still buy XBoxes.
To quote Sekto Springs and concur with OANST: It's a gaming computer for people who don't like computers.
The OS will be geared towards gaming and connectivity, a sort of gaming center PC in the way that a Mac is a media center PC. Everything's front-end, no mucking about with... well, anything.
If this seems like more of a restriction to you than an asset, stick to the PC. Like iOS, you could download third-party plugins to give it more versatility, but if you did, then you'd be an idiot for buying a Steam Box in the first place. Plug a controller into it. Plug your TV into it. Plug six TVs into it and play with five other people. Browse the web. Watch a movie. Don't expect to be blown away. It's just a computer, simplified.
But this doesn't make it a console. There's no "XBox is better than YBox" argument because despite its simplicity, the Steam Box won't be rigid in it's capabilities, because the platform isn't controlled by any company. Valve make the OS, but they don't control a Steam Box any more than Microsoft controls a Windows PC. Install whatever you want. In fact, you don't even have to use their OS. If you wanted, you could install Windows on one. But see my "Don't-buy-a-Mac-if-you-want-a-PC" point above.
Valve anticipate and encourage people to repurpose their technology.
They won't make any complete overhauls for Steam-Linux-OS (Steanux?). But they'll put the tools to create them out there anyway. Why? Because Valve love the internet. They're confident that people will find their own ways of making their products more useful (i.e. profitable), so they're all too happy to hand over the keys.
The only real hooks of this for me are:
a) I can play games with my friends who just like shoving discs into a box and knowing it'll work.
b) I want to see what people make of it. Valve aren't making a box that I would buy, but with enough mods, I might want to just to access those. Like Skyrim!
c) Valve tend to come up with some interesting fallout when they work towards pleasing a particular demographic. They're looking into making their own controllers, and they're not like the things already available.
d) Phil Fish's head will explode.
Note: This entire post was extrapolated from rumours. May contain traces of accuracy.
Interview with GabeN:
http://www.theverge.com/2013/1/8/385...ture-of-gaming
Steam games that currently run on Linux i.e. will run on Steam Box from launch day:
http://store.steampowered.com/search...1=998&os=linux