Science Valve CEO Gabe Newell’s Neuralink competitor is expecting its first brain chip this year - The stealthy startup thinks multiple simultaneous smaller brain implants could be better than one.


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Valve CEO Gabe Newell pretends to get a hole drilled into his head for a brain-computer interface.

by Sean Hollister
May 23, 2025

Valve co-founder and CEO Gabe Newell, the company behind Half-Life and DOTA 2 and Counter-Strike and preeminent PC game distribution platform Steam, has long toyed with the idea that your brain should be more connected to your PC. It began over a decade ago with in-house psychologists studying people’s biological responses to video games; Valve once considered earlobe monitors for its first VR headset. The company publicly explored the idea of brain-computer interfaces for gaming at GDC in 2019.

But Newell decided to spin off the idea. That same year, he quietly incorporated a new brain-computer interface startup, Starfish Neuroscience — which has now revealed plans to produce its very first brain chip later this year.

Starfish’s first blog post, spotted by Valve watcher Brad Lynch, makes it clear we’re not talking about a complete implant yet. This bit is the custom “electrophysiology” chip designed to record brain activity (like how Neuralink can “read your mind” so patients can interact with computers) and stimulate the brain (for disease therapy), but Starfish isn’t claiming it’s already built the systems to power it or the bits to stick it into a person’s head.

“We anticipate our first chips arriving in late 2025 and we are interested in finding collaborators for whom such a chip would open new and exciting avenues,” writes Starfish neuroengineer Nate Cermak (bolding theirs), suggesting that Starfish might wind up partnering with other companies for wireless power or even the final brain implant.

But the goal, writes Starfish, is a smaller and less invasive implant than the competition, one that can “enable simultaneous access to multiple brain regions” instead of just one site, and one that doesn’t require a battery. Using just 1.1 milliwatts during “normal recording,” Starfish says it can work with wireless power transmission instead.

Here’s the chip’s current spec sheet:
  • Low power: 1.1 mW total power consumption during normal recording
  • Physically small: 2 x 4mm (0.3mm pitch BGA)
  • Capable of both recording (spikes and LFP) & stimulation (biphasic pulses)
  • 32 electrode sites, 16 simultaneous recording channels at 18.75kHz
  • 1 current source for stimulating on arbitrary pairs of electrodes
  • Onboard impedance monitoring and stim voltage transient measurement
  • Digital onboard data processing and spike detection allows the device to operate via low-bandwidth wireless interfaces.
  • Fabricated in TSMC 55nm process
Neuralink’s N1, for comparison, has 1,024 electrodes across its 64 brain-implanted threads, a chip that consumed around 6 milliwatts as of 2019, a battery that periodically needs wireless charging, and the full implant (again, not just the chip) is around 23mm wide and 8mm thick. The Elon Musk-led company has reportedly already implanted it in three humans; while some of the threads did detach from the first patient’s brain, he still has functionality and has been giving interviews.

Starfish says it could be important to connect to multiple parts of the brain simultaneously, instead of just one region, to address issues like Parkinson’s disease. “there is increasing evidence that a number of neurological disorders involve circuit-level dysfunction, in which the interactions between brain regions may be misregulated,” Cermak writes.

In addition to multiple simultaneous brain implants, the company’s updated website says it’s working on a “precision hyperthermia device” to destroy tumors with targeted heat, and a brain-reading, robotically guided transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) system for addressing neurological conditions like bipolar disorder and depression.

In case you’re wondering how any of this might make its way back to gaming, I’ll leave you with Valve’s talk from GDC 2019 about brain-computer interfaces.

 
Multiple small brain chips likely would be better than one due to how decentralized mammalian brains are. Especially human and primate brains. Never get these chips though, because they're hard and the brain has the consistency of butter they don't tend to stay on the brain too well and can cause lots of issues. There's also a huge infection risk for implanting any of these. All of this shit needs soft electrodes and transistors if it's going to work, to be honest.
 
If this brainchip thing was going to be like Commodore 64 or TempleOS, I might consider enhancing my cognitive capabilities after they've worked out all the kinks. But we all know it's going to be like completely fucked up and dystopian, and the unstoppable ads Jewgle will be playing in your brain is going to be the least inhumane part of how it's going to work.
 
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Yeah this is totally a great idea and has no drawbacks like all those advanced prosthetics and disability aids that sound great until the fucking company cuts support or the tech becomes obsolete then patients are assed out of luck if they don’t kick down another $10k for the latest upgrades.
 
Yeah this is totally a great idea and has no drawbacks like all those advanced prosthetics and disability aids that sound great until the fucking company cuts support or the tech becomes obsolete then patients are assed out of luck if they don’t kick down another $10k for the latest upgrades.
You need to add another 0 to that, actually. There's the surgeon, then there's the device.
 
Half of these companies go out of business or deprecate the chips so you're left with unsupported hardware in your dome that dies and there is no reasonable path for extraction.
Yeah, even some companies that have tried to make really high-tech bionics have had this happen too. Like is talked about in this article. Then Blewberry ninja'd me while I was waiting for the archive. :(
The better option is regenerative medicine over bionics for any kind of treatment for a condition or damage. Regenerative medicine is not so profitable though and is not nearly well developed enough to replace eyes. There is some hope for fixing brain damage with brain organoids though, from what I heard. Essentially using some of your own cells to make miniature brains and, from what I remember, sticking them onto a damaged spot after something like a stroke.

Bionics should be something maybe done in the future for enhancement, but even then it still comes with its prior issues. At least if regenerative medicine has advanced enough then the removal of bionics won't be a problem for most people.
 
Never get these chips though, because they're hard and the brain has the consistency of butter
Yeah, this is the physical problem (aside from the ethical ones.) it’s like stirring blancmange with a sword.
None of it will work until they invent a system that can be grown into the brain. They’d be better off taking fungal filaments as a start point as a concept. Hardware to wetware won’t work. The chips will need to be organic
 
The chips will need to be organic
Or at the very least if they aren't organic that they have organic bits in them. Like collagen fibers that are then bonded to parts of the brain with something like transglutaminase(AKA "meat glue"). I think inorganic designs could be feasible, but they'd likely have to have a very similar density to that of the brain as well as a similar hardness and flexibility. There is some interesting things with electric bacteria, namely cable bacteria, that can have quite conductive filaments. If we were going to do organic transistors and cabling, they'd be a good starting point. I remember reading a paper on them that found that their average conductivity was a fair bit better than Mercury.
 
I've seen where brainchips lead to. They really thirst for control.

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Not to mention brainchips are made of metal. Now, if you remember the anal railgun when a faggot forgot to remove his buttplug when he went under MRI, imagine how a brainchip will react when you put some poor bastard under the same conditions.
 
Man, I can't wait to fucking see the nigger cattle cry and bitch about how these things turned them retarded, or burned a hole in their brain, or whatever else. Anyone that thinks this is even remotely a good idea should be the test subjects and leave the test animals alone. Too many people on Earth now anyways. Hell use the niggers from Africa, if I can visibly see one of those mongoloids getting these chips installed in their noggin and they start composing sonatas then I'll eat my pants.
 
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