Worldstream and Valebyte sit at opposite ends of the same market: Worldstream owns its datacenters in the Netherlands (plus a German presence) and controls everything from the racks to the 10 Tbit/s+ network; Valebyte owns almost nothing and aggregates stock from large operators across 30+ cities. Both models produce real numbers worth comparing — and on some machines the prices land surprisingly close, which makes the structural differences the actual decision.
The numbers side by side
| Worldstream | Valebyte | |
|---|---|---|
| Model | Own DCs, Naaldwijk (NL) + DE | Aggregator, 30+ cities EU/US/CA/APAC |
| Entry dedicated | ~€95 (EPYC 7402P, 64 GB, 2×480 SSD) | $9 (Atom C2350, 4 GB) — different class, but the floor exists |
| Modern 8-core | Ryzen 9700X, 64 GB, 2×960 NVMe — €125 | Ryzen 9700X, 64 GB, 2×512 NVMe — $126 |
| Traffic | 50–100 TB, 1–10 Gbps guaranteed uplinks | Line-dependent; OVH-sourced lines unmetered at 1 Gbps class |
| Delivery | ~2 hours on instant stock | Automated same-day on API-backed stock |
| Setup fee | none on stock, €99 on custom builds | none |
The honest headline: on the machine both companies sell in identical spec (Ryzen 9700X / 64 GB / NVMe), the price difference is one dollar. Nobody wins that row on price. The decision lives elsewhere.
What owning the datacenter buys Worldstream customers
Vertical integration is not marketing fluff — it has three concrete consequences. Hardware operations (disk swap, RAM upgrade, KVM attach) are performed by the same organization you pay, with an advertised 7-minute average support response. Network engineering is in-house on their own 10 Tbit/s+ backbone, so a routing complaint reaches someone who can fix it. And the 2-hour delivery on stock configs is a real SLA-grade process, not a best-effort estimate. If your infrastructure concentrates in the Benelux and you value one accountable operator, this is a genuinely strong offer — we say that as the competitor.
What the aggregator model buys ours
Geography and range. Worldstream's world is two countries; ours is Frankfurt, Paris, London, Warsaw, Šiauliai, Stockholm, Chicago, Miami, Beauharnois, Singapore, Tokyo, Sydney and twenty more. If you need one vendor for a Dutch box and a Singapore box and a Chicago box, aggregation is the only model that delivers it in one panel and one invoice. The second difference is the floor: Worldstream's catalog starts around €95 because owning DCs makes cheap old hardware uneconomical to rack; our catalog keeps $9–59 tiers precisely because wholesale platforms keep old iron alive. A proxy node, a staging box or a backup target does not deserve a €95 machine.
Looking for a server that just works?
Valebyte VPS — NVMe, 24/7 support, deploy in 60 seconds.
Where each one wins
- Worldstream wins: NL/DE-centric deployments, 10 Gbps guaranteed uplink needs, teams that want hardware ops and network under one roof, sub-2-hour delivery guarantees.
- Valebyte wins: multi-region footprints, budget tiers under €95, APAC/North America presence, and mixed fleets (one modern app server + three cheap satellites) — see the Amsterdam price breakdown for how our Dutch stock itself compares.
- Toss-up: a single modern 8-core box in the Netherlands. At $126 vs €125, decide on support model, not price.
Prices verified July 6, 2026 on worldstream.com and our catalog. Both change with stock; if a row has drifted, tell support.