Steam Breaks Its Record For PC Players Online Once Again (ign.com)
(Monday September 23, 2024 @11:30PM (BeauHD)
from the record-breaking dept.)
- Reference: 0175114961
- News link: https://games.slashdot.org/story/24/09/23/2143208/steam-breaks-its-record-for-pc-players-online-once-again
- Source link: https://www.ign.com/articles/steam-breaks-its-record-for-pc-players-online-once-again
Steam has [1]broken its record for the most PC players online , with 38,366,479 concurrent gamers. As IGN notes, that figure is a million more than the previous record, set last month. From the report:
> So, what helped propel Steam to new heights over the weekend? All the usual suspects were in the top 10 most-played games on Valve's platform, including Counter-Strike 2, Dota 2, Banana (yes, Banana has yet to split), and PUBG, with this year's Black Myth: Wukong, Satisfactory 1.0, Space Marine 2, and Valve's own Deadlock putting in work. Last week saw PlayStation exclusives God of War Ragnarok and Final Fantasy 16 both launch on Steam for the first time, which will have provided a modest boost, too.
>
> The popularity of Steam is gradually increasing as Valve's vice-like grip on the PC market tightens ever further. Competitors such as the Epic Games Store and CD Projekt's GOG occupy a relatively small piece of the PC gaming pie, with Steam continuing to enjoy record-breaking success even amid perceived downturns in the video game industry. The release of Steam Deck is yet another platform on which Steam operates.
[1] https://www.ign.com/articles/steam-breaks-its-record-for-pc-players-online-once-again
> So, what helped propel Steam to new heights over the weekend? All the usual suspects were in the top 10 most-played games on Valve's platform, including Counter-Strike 2, Dota 2, Banana (yes, Banana has yet to split), and PUBG, with this year's Black Myth: Wukong, Satisfactory 1.0, Space Marine 2, and Valve's own Deadlock putting in work. Last week saw PlayStation exclusives God of War Ragnarok and Final Fantasy 16 both launch on Steam for the first time, which will have provided a modest boost, too.
>
> The popularity of Steam is gradually increasing as Valve's vice-like grip on the PC market tightens ever further. Competitors such as the Epic Games Store and CD Projekt's GOG occupy a relatively small piece of the PC gaming pie, with Steam continuing to enjoy record-breaking success even amid perceived downturns in the video game industry. The release of Steam Deck is yet another platform on which Steam operates.
[1] https://www.ign.com/articles/steam-breaks-its-record-for-pc-players-online-once-again
Satisfactory 1.0 (Score:1)
by drinkypoo ( 153816 )
A minuscule contribution to that total is no doubt the release of [1]Satisfactory [wikipedia.org] 1.0. It's allegedly FPS factorio, which I haven't actually played because it's too expensive for what it is as far as I can tell from screenshots. You have enormous freedom to build, and a long production chain to unlock and discover. I stopped playing the Early Access version when I got nuclear power (not long after it became possible) and there's a fair amount of new content and features which have been added since which are of
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Satisfactory
part of it (Score:1)
...might be that Steam just does it's fucking job.
It serves games. That's it.
No woke policing.
No ventures off into Ai collaborations.
No politics.
No trying to sell us New Coke.
It just does it's thing.