We now have teardown pics of the Steam Frame controller and it looks like it could be pretty repairable

The FCC has just made public some exhibits for the left Steam Frame controller (via SadlyItsBradley). We’ve known the FCC ID 2AES4-1013 refers to the left controller for the upcoming Valve VR headset for a while, but we now have iFixit-style teardown pictures of it, courtesy of Valve itself.

Things could presumably still change, but the main takeaway is that it looks like the controller could actually be pretty repairable.

The pictures show internals made of multiple little PCBs, rather unlike the Index’s giant, finnicky PCB chunk that requires a soldering iron for some repairs. It looks like the new controller will have plenty of threaded screws, too, and everything looks pretty easy to access.

This isn’t too surprising, given we were very impressed with the new Steam Controller’s repairability. Our Jacob Ridley did a teardown of the Steam Controller and concluded: “Valve has shown it cares about repairability in the past and that holds true for the Steam Controller… Many parts of the Steam Controller should be an easy replacement with minimal fuss, especially once spare parts are available to purchase.”

Regarding the Steam Frame more generally, Valve has been sticking to its summertime launch goal, and a recent shipping manifest suggests that Frame imports are already arriving in Valve’s US warehouse. The new FCC filings are just further evidence of a hopefully imminent launch.

Valve, FCCValve, FCCValve, FCC

We still don’t know how the headset will be priced, however. One thing to note on this front is that it’s a standalone device, meaning it has to have memory so it can, well, run games—16 GB of LPDDR5, no less. In other words, it won’t be immune to the RAMpocalypse.

Still, every little helps, and not having to fork out for a whole new controller if anything goes wrong would be a nice way to potentially keep costs a little lower, even if indirectly.

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