HardwareJuly 13, 2026

Valve Just Quietly Put a 'Great on Frame' Section on Steam. That Is How You Know the Headset Is Almost Here.

By Alex Reeves
Staff Writer, VR.org
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Valve does not send press releases when it wants you to notice something. It usually just puts it on the store and lets the community find it. This week the company quietly published a new Steam page called Great on Frame, a curated section that collects the games certified to run well on the Steam Frame, the standalone VR headset it revealed last November. The page is thin at the moment. A handful of titles, a header, not much else. That is not really the point. The point is that it exists at all.

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Overview of Valve Steam Frame price, release date, and software details
Watch: Valve Steam Frame, Price, Release Date and Software on YouTube →

If the name rings a bell, it should. Great on Frame is the VR sibling of Great on Deck, the label Valve built for the Steam Deck to tell buyers at a glance whether a given game would actually play well on the hardware. Deck Verified became one of the most quietly influential systems Valve has ever shipped. It reshaped how developers thought about performance targets, and it reshaped what people bought, because a green checkmark on a store page moves units. Valve is now pointing that same machinery at a headset.

A storefront section is the real launch signal

Enthusiasts have been reading Steam Frame tea leaves for months. FCC filings, shipping manifests, store page placeholders, the works. Most of that is noise. A public storefront category is not noise. Valve does not stand up a customer facing shopping section for a product it plans to sell next year. It does that when the product is close enough that merchandising it makes sense.

We have seen the pattern before. The store pages for the second generation Steam Machine and the new Steam Controller went live in April, well ahead of either going on sale. The Steam Machine then landed at $1,049 and started shipping on June 30. The Frame is the last piece of that hardware wave still waiting for a date. A live Great on Frame page is the clearest hint yet that the wait is measured in weeks, not quarters.

Discussion of new Valve Steam Machine and Steam Frame details
Watch: Valve Reveals More About Steam Machine and Frame on YouTube →

There is a logistical logic to the sequencing too. Valve tends to clear one launch before piling on the next, and the Steam Machine only just started reaching doorsteps. Getting the Frame out the door once that channel is flowing is the obvious next move. If you have been refreshing the Steam hardware page out of habit, this is the week to start doing it with intent.

What Great on Frame actually certifies

Back in April we covered Valve's Frame Verified requirements, and the bar was not gentle. To earn the label, a game has to hold 90 frames per second on the headset, which is stricter than what Quest or Pico ask of their own certification tiers. That number matters more in VR than it does on a handheld. On a Deck, a game that dips to 40 frames is annoying. In a headset strapped to your face, a game that dips below 90 is a quick route to motion sickness. Valve is essentially promising that anything wearing the Great on Frame badge will not make you queasy.

So the new page is the shop window for that program. It is where the certification stops being a developer document and starts being a purchase decision. A shopper browsing the section is not reading a spec sheet. They are seeing which games Valve has personally vouched for on day one, which is exactly the kind of trust signal that made Deck Verified so effective.

It helps to remember what the Frame is underneath all this. It runs a Qualcomm Snapdragon chip with 16GB of memory, dual 2160 by 2160 LCD panels behind pancake lenses, and refresh rates that climb to 144Hz. It works as a standalone headset and as a wireless window into a full PC library through streaming. That dual identity is the hard part of certification. A game has to be judged both on how it runs natively and on how it behaves when it is beamed over from a desktop, and Great on Frame is where Valve will communicate the difference to people who do not want to think about it.

The Deck playbook, pointed at VR

Analysis of how Steam Frame changes the rules for VR
Watch: Steam Frame, Valve Just Changed the Rules on YouTube →

The strategy here is not subtle, and it does not need to be. Valve has a proven template for launching hardware into a messy software catalog. You build a certification bar, you badge the games that clear it, you surface those badges where people shop, and you let the green checkmarks do the persuading. The Deck turned that loop into a flywheel. The company is now running the same play in a category, PC VR, that has always struggled to tell newcomers which of its thousands of titles are actually worth buying.

The one thing the page cannot hide is how empty it looks today. A few titles is not a launch lineup, and Steam Frame has already drawn criticism for lacking an obvious killer app to anchor it. A curated section only sells headsets if there is something compelling inside it. Valve has the rest of the summer to fill those shelves, and the pace at which Great on Frame grows over the next few weeks will tell you more about the launch than any leaked shipping manifest ever could.

For now, the takeaway is simple. Valve just did the retail equivalent of clearing its throat. When a company this allergic to hype quietly builds you a place to shop, the product is almost in the room.

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