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3D-printed Steam Machine uses GeForce RTX 5060

The Terk Box, printed on a 3D printer, looks almost identical to the Steam Machine.
ⓘ Jacob Terkelsen
The Terk Box, printed on a 3D printer, looks almost identical to the Steam Machine.
The Steam Machine costs $1,049 even without a controller, and it offers gaming performance on par with an Nvidia GeForce RTX 5050. A modder has now demonstrated that, using a 3D printer and a GeForce RTX 5060, you can build your own, more affordable gaming PC in the same form factor with far greater performance.

The Steam Machine is marketed as a bridge between PC and console gaming. Thanks to SteamOS and HDMI CEC, the cube can be operated almost as easily as a PlayStation 5 ($599 on Amazon). Unlike a regular gaming PC, the Steam Machine can, for example, be woken from standby mode using a gamepad or controlled via a smart TV remote.

With prices starting at $1,049, however, the value for money is questionable, as the Steam Machine uses a GPU that’s nearly equivalent to the AMD Radeon RX 7600M, making the device slightly slower than a Sony PS5 or an Nvidia GeForce RTX 5050. AMD engineer Jacob Terkelsen has now published files on Printables that allow users to produce a PC case in the design and format of the Steam Machine using a 3D printer. Screws, magnets, a PCIe riser cable, rubber feet, and the PC hardware must be purchased separately.
 


It’s up to the user to decide which components to install in the case. In a test run, Mark Terkelsen combined a 400-watt Flex-ATX power supply with a small Nvidia GeForce RTX 5060, which should make the “Terk Box” significantly more powerful than the Steam Machine. The case is designed for a Mini-ITX motherboard.

However, the case leaves very little room for a CPU cooler. Since the processor is located beneath the power supply, the cooler can be no more than 30 millimeters tall, meaning the processor’s heat dissipation must be limited in many cases. The Terk Box may not be quite as elegant as the Steam Machine, but it demonstrates that even with off-the-shelf PC hardware, it’s possible to build a more powerful gaming PC in the Steam Machine form factor.
 

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Hannes Brecher, 2026-06-25 (Update: 2026-06-25)