Valve just imported nearly 32 metric tons of “Virtual Reality Devices” in a single day, which works out to roughly 13 tons of actual product after container weight is removed. The shipment arrived in Los Angeles on June 10 aboard the German container ship Posen after a two-week trip from Shanghai, and the import records point to Valve’s distribution partner Ceva handling the offload. The scale strongly suggests the first mass production shipments of the Steam Frame are landing.
theverge.com
Valve just imported 13 tons of VR headsets in one day
On June 10th, the German container ship Posen docked in Los Angeles after a two-week voyage from Shanghai. As Valve watcher Brad Lynch notes, it…
theverge.com
high-tier
2026-06-13
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The VR haul is part of a broader stockpiling pattern around Valve hardware. The same import trail suggests Valve’s Steam Machine stockpile has grown to 141 metric tons, with “Game Consoles” product arriving in 12,600kg containers since April 23. The evidence also points to three Steam Deck shipments in May, including two on May 18 and one on May 30.
theverge.com
Valve just imported 13 tons of VR headsets in one day
On June 10th, the German container ship Posen docked in Los Angeles after a two-week voyage from Shanghai. As Valve watcher Brad Lynch notes, it…
theverge.com
high-tier
2026-06-13
View full article →
Against that backdrop, the Steam topic is still defined by hardware logistics rather than software hype. Valve’s records are separating “Virtual Reality Devices” from “Game Consoles,” making the VR shipments especially notable as the company continues moving multiple product lines at once.
theverge.com
Valve just imported 13 tons of VR headsets in one day
On June 10th, the German container ship Posen docked in Los Angeles after a two-week voyage from Shanghai. As Valve watcher Brad Lynch notes, it…
theverge.com
high-tier
2026-06-13
View full article →