Valve dropped the Steam Controller 2 with very little fanfare — a quiet product page update, a brief social post, and within three hours, every unit across every supported region was gone. No countdown timer. No pre-order window. Just a button that went from Add to Cart to Notify Me faster than most people could find their credit card.

Gone Before Most People Even Knew It Launched

The initial stock allocation — rumoured to be around 150,000 units globally — evaporated within the first two hours of going live on the Steam store. By the time the launch news hit mainstream gaming outlets, it was already too late. Waitlists filled up within minutes, and third-party scalpers immediately listed units on eBay for two to three times the retail price of USD $79.99.

The r/Steam and r/SteamDeck communities erupted almost immediately, with thousands of posts from frustrated gamers who had Steam open at launch but still couldn't secure a unit. Discord servers dedicated to Valve hardware had members sharing screen recordings of the checkout page timing out mid-purchase.

By the numbers: According to third-party Steam data trackers, the product page received over 2.1 million unique visits in the first 24 hours — making it one of the most-visited hardware listings in Steam's history.

So What Makes It So Good?

Valve spent years listening to the criticism of the original Steam Controller, and it shows. The SC2 addresses nearly every complaint from the first generation while pushing the hardware significantly further.

The Key Features

Spec Detail
ConnectivityBluetooth 5.3, 2.4GHz USB-A dongle
BatteryUp to 40 hours (USB-C rechargeable)
Analog SticksHall effect (no drift)
TrackpadsDual capacitive, 55mm diameter each
Gyro6-axis IMU, configurable per-game
Rear Paddles4 remappable buttons
Weight285g (with batteries)
RRP (USD)$79.99

When Is Australia Getting One?

This is the question every Australian gamer is asking right now, and the honest answer is: Valve hasn't confirmed a date. The initial launch was limited to the United States, Canada, and select European markets. Australia, New Zealand, and most of the Asia-Pacific region were not included in the first wave.

Valve's Australian Steam store currently shows the controller as "Coming Soon — Region Not Yet Available." Based on Valve's previous hardware rollout history — the Steam Deck launched in Australia roughly five months after the US — we'd estimate an Australian launch window of late Q3 to Q4 2026, likely September to November.

Estimated AU pricing: If Valve follows its standard regional pricing conversion, the Steam Controller 2 should land at approximately AUD $129–$139 when it officially arrives in Australia — before you factor in any duty or import costs.

Your Options Right Now

Your Gaming Buddy Tip
We stock a curated range of premium controllers with fast Australian shipping. Check our store for current availability while you wait for the official Steam Controller 2 launch.

If you can't wait, here are your realistic options as an Australian buyer today:

  1. Join the official waitlist — Head to store.steampowered.com and hit "Notify Me" on the Steam Controller 2 page. Valve says waitlisted users will get priority access when Australian stock is allocated.
  2. Import via a freight forwarder — Services like ShipItTo or Shipito give you a US address for around AUD $30–50 in forwarding fees. Expect to pay close to AUD $160–180 all up including the unit and shipping.
  3. Watch JB Hi-Fi and EB Games — Both retailers have confirmed they are in conversations with Valve's Australian distributor. JB Hi-Fi has historically been Valve's main Australian retail partner for hardware.
  4. Check Amazon AU — Third-party sellers are already listing imported units, but prices are significantly inflated. Approach with caution and check seller ratings carefully.

Is It Worth Waiting For?

In a word: yes. The Steam Controller 2 is shaping up to be the most customisable and PC-native controller ever made. For PC gamers who want gyro aiming, trackpad precision, and deep Steam Input integration — there's genuinely nothing else like it on the market right now.

The sell-out wasn't a manufactured hype shortage. Early reviews from US buyers are overwhelmingly positive, with particular praise for the trackpad haptics and the near-elimination of stick drift. If Valve can maintain supply for the Australian launch, this one is going to move fast locally too.

Keep your eyes on Your Gaming Buddy — we'll be covering the Australian launch the moment Valve makes it official, and we'll have stock information from our retail partners as soon as it's available.