Another month, and another Steam Hardware Survey has been released. This time we have gained a little rather than lost a little.
To the numbers:
Linux results for March 2015
Ubuntu 14.04.2 LTS 64 bit 0.31% +0.24%
Ubuntu 14.10 64 bit 0.15% +0.01%
Linux Mint 17.1 Rebecca 64 bit 0.11% +0.02%
Linux 3.10 64 bit 0.09% +0.01%
Ubuntu 14.04.1 LTS 64 bit 0.06% -0.24%
Total: 1.06% +0.04%
Last Month: 1.02%
My thoughts on it
A little increase for Linux this month and the usual changes for Mint, Ubuntu and the distros that report themselves as "Linux 3.10".
The real interesting thing to see here is that, again, only 64bit distributions are shown. The number of Linux users on Steam hasn't changed too much since the beginning, so is 64bit just gaining more popularity with Linux gamers? I personally sure hope so, as the "death" of 32bit is something I've been expecting for a while to finally happen.
Important things to remember
Be aware these results will probably not be that accurate as we don't know how they do their percentage results, they could be rounding up, rounding down or truncating the percentages. So a 0.5% could actually be nearly 0.6% as it could be 0.59% but they could do no rounding and simply truncate it.
Also remember it is a survey, so it won't ask every single one of you to do it. It would only be truly accurate if it did it behind the scenes, but that's not what a survey is for this is just to get a general idea.
Final Note: Look at it this way, Steam has around 100 million active users, 1% of 100 million is about 1,000,000 (1 million) people. What developer wouldn't want to hook into a market that big? Of course it doesn't mean they are guaranteed that amount of sales, but it's something fun to remember.
See the Hardware Survey on Steam here.
To the numbers:
Linux results for March 2015
Ubuntu 14.04.2 LTS 64 bit 0.31% +0.24%
Ubuntu 14.10 64 bit 0.15% +0.01%
Linux Mint 17.1 Rebecca 64 bit 0.11% +0.02%
Linux 3.10 64 bit 0.09% +0.01%
Ubuntu 14.04.1 LTS 64 bit 0.06% -0.24%
Total: 1.06% +0.04%
Last Month: 1.02%
My thoughts on it
A little increase for Linux this month and the usual changes for Mint, Ubuntu and the distros that report themselves as "Linux 3.10".
The real interesting thing to see here is that, again, only 64bit distributions are shown. The number of Linux users on Steam hasn't changed too much since the beginning, so is 64bit just gaining more popularity with Linux gamers? I personally sure hope so, as the "death" of 32bit is something I've been expecting for a while to finally happen.
Important things to remember
Be aware these results will probably not be that accurate as we don't know how they do their percentage results, they could be rounding up, rounding down or truncating the percentages. So a 0.5% could actually be nearly 0.6% as it could be 0.59% but they could do no rounding and simply truncate it.
Also remember it is a survey, so it won't ask every single one of you to do it. It would only be truly accurate if it did it behind the scenes, but that's not what a survey is for this is just to get a general idea.
Final Note: Look at it this way, Steam has around 100 million active users, 1% of 100 million is about 1,000,000 (1 million) people. What developer wouldn't want to hook into a market that big? Of course it doesn't mean they are guaranteed that amount of sales, but it's something fun to remember.
See the Hardware Survey on Steam here.
Some you may have missed, popular articles from the last month:
Since I am using Linux I spent more money for games and hardware/periphery than on Windows. Mostly because I am willing to spend my money for good things which are working on Linux. Previously on Windows it had to be cheap -- in every way possible.
How many of them are bots / scammers ? Active users over 48hrs tends to be about maximum 8 million. Its still a large market and probably over the course of 6 months probably equals about 40 - 50 million if we include the most casual users out there.
but yea, I take your point the increase in users is swamping Linux stats. The first goto platform will almost always be windows ( until steamOS takes off more )
I think it is because what we are seeing right now is Linux users getting into gaming, and not gamers getting into Linux. Not yet.
It got me thinking, I noticed there were some references to Wine in the results they were collecting. They should have a separate OS listing for Wine. It'd be interesting to see how many Windows results are actually OSX or Linux users running Steam through Wine.
The fact that a semi-popular YouTube channel, Tek Syndicate, is brewing interest in Linux is what matters to me. People are jumping in, tinkering, and sharing (without "RTFM" attitude) what they have learned/created. This is where we all genuinely started, and it's great news that word of mouth is spreading to a more viral / modern platform.
A site like GoL, matters to me. I can't recall a time where there even was an active large Linux community dedicated for gaming. Strange as it sounds, it is still a big step for us due to the limited ecosystem that's driving it forward. A missing optional piece to the Linux puzzle, if you will.
Steam / Humble Indie Bundle / GOG / Desura / Itch.io / etc matter to me. These platforms aren't going to stop giving Linux gaming a platform. If anything, they will keep the ball rolling. Valve's dedication to push driver support and Vulkan adoption honestly made me shed a tear for a bright future no matter what happens.
SteamOS / Machines is just icing on the cake, honestly, and it will provide a beneficial platform for those uninterested in the Linux side of things. Could it be the final console type? Possibly, since the current platforms are failing to keep people (gamers and developers) interest. However, I would like to point out, that it is also possible that consoles just die off altogether. What's important to note here though, is that hardware vendors (whether you like a particular one or not) finally are grouping up to give the Linux (SteamOS) option a viability.
People legitimately enjoying their new found Linux flavour/DE has always been important to me (even if SteamOS is simply a flavour of a console OS). I'm not an evangelist type, but that is what has kept the Linux ecosystem alive. People make these things happen.
Also, maybe it's just me, but people aren't trash talking Linux as much as they did a long time ago. Of course it still happens, but I've noticed a positive trend of "I hope Linux does well, even though it's not for me [atm]".
Sorry for the rant, but I just don't agree with "Steam should downplay the numbers". I didn't simply want to attack that statement, but explain why this is unnecessary to be suddenly non-transparent (people actually care about this a lot more nowadays) . Just shedding some positive forethought, and no, I wasn't trying to bolster that with an "evangelist for Linux" speech. ;)
Sry to say that, but I believe its the fault of the distributions:
The top players are Linux Mint, which is community driven, Ubuntu which looks ugly, is slow and uses outdated software and represents linux for a lot of people and I believe Arch (?) which is however community driven as well.
1 year ago Ubuntu and Canonical had a very good position but nowadays I dont believe anyone really supports Ubuntu anymore with their egoistic behaviour...
Just think about, if you would have friends and family, would you *really* recommend them to use Linux? Like really? I wouldn't.
My hopes lay in the following distros, however I have my doubts:
*Elementary OS (Very appealing to new comers, and seems easy to use, however not a real software center there yet, kind of community driven)
*Fedora (well, they only support free software, so it will never be a sucess at all)
*Linux Mint (well its community driven.. so no one will invest into it at all, they dont have very innovative software :/)
*Arch Linux (Actually I believe Archlinux, or one of its deriviates, will soon be the biggest distro (bigger than all) because if you learn to know it the first time, the rolling release aspect will attract you and you never want anything else :)
The same thing happens to me all the time. I would love to see how many of the "Windows" users are actually using WINE.
I started up my windows partition for the first time in several weeks (only to keep the system updated) when this survey popped up. I couldn't remember if your OS was a multiple choice question or if it was automatically detected...so I closed the survey box without replying. -1 linux user.
If you would sound like a troll...
I installed Linux on my fiancée's PC and there's no problem with it.
Most people cannot properly aminister Linux?
Probably - and Windows neither.
Can't take you seriously after comments like that. You think Ubuntu is ugly and slow? I don't and I've been using it since 2006.
Valve don't care what we think though, either. They need the most popular distro and to stand behind it. Until that becomes SteamOS, it's Ubuntu. Everything else is irrelevant. Sure it's great that Steam works on other distros, but irrelevant.
Yes. Really. I would.
And I have. Got a few friends now, tired of Windows, not wanting to waste money on a new laptop they only use for web and email. One Ubuntu install later, all fixed, all happy. Not sure what your solution would be, but mine worked out okay. Of maybe 7 or 8 such installs over the past four or so years, only one bought a new laptop and that was after running Ubuntu for about two years - loved it, but needed a new laptop after battery issues with the old one. They despise Windows 8, but haven't (yet) asked me to revert it back to Ubuntu, probably because they know it takes me a couple of hours of tinkering to get all their stuff "just so". I imagine it will happen eventually though.
What's your problem with recommending Linux?
Overwhelmingly larger Windows catalogue (for AAA games), crap performance from AMD hardware in Linux and abysmal from Intel, inability to use a lot of software, a sheet long list of distros that will totally confuse any new commer, Unity Launcher in the most popular distribution, overall higher level of tech knowledge required to use Linux... Take your pick. And let's not forget an increasingly hostile Linux community - a problem that has become quite serious in recent years. Team A-hole is getting bigger and louder. YouTube is full of videos of both new users and Linux veterans that are complaining about it.
Well, you started off pretty strong there. Some good points. Perhaps you should have stopped before you got into murky waters of Unity-hate and blatant opinion on the ease of use of Linux or the toxicity of the user base.
But I'll bite anyway. Care to expand on what you think users won't like about the Unity Launcher? Be specific. As I say, I've been an Ubuntu user a long time and I agree that the 11.04 and 11.10 iterations were raw - I tended to revert my use of those versions back to... oh, I can't remember the name of it now... Docker? Something like that. But by 12.04, Unity Launcher was solid and since 15.04 is about to launch, that means that I've been using this Launcher for nearly 3 years and had no idea it was somehow magically "bad".
What's wrong with it?