Valve emailed in today to let us know about the new Steam Labs, a dedicated section on Steam for Valve to show off some experiments they're doing and for you to test and break them.
Behind the scenes at Steam, we create many experimental features with codenames like The Peabody Recommender and Organize Your Steam Library Using Morse Code. For the first time, we're giving these works-in-progress a home called Steam Labs, where you can interact with them, tell us whether you think they're worth pursuing further, and if so, share your thoughts on how they should evolve.
The first three experiments Valve are showing off to the public are up now, which are:
- Micro Trailers - A six second trailer for each game
- Interactive Recommender - A "machine learning" recommendation system to suggest games you might like
- Automatic Show - A daily auto-generated video to show off popular games
All interesting ideas and I do appreciate Valve being a lot more open in the past year or two. This new recommendation stuff is interesting, since the last time they tweaked their algorithm some indie developers were hit hard by it (I see complaints on Twitter daily), so this time they're doing it entirely separate to get it right and co-exist with existing features.
Valve did say this new recommendation system cannot suggest new games that don't have players yet, since there's no data on it. However, once it has a few days of data it can. This time around, the recommendation system is based on what you play and seem to enjoy, rather than what developers can do on Steam like tags, reviews and so on.
See more on Steam Labs. You can give them feedback on it here.
Do let us know what you think in the comments.
Also doesn't look like it can be filtered by OS? I use Steamplay, but it would be nice to be able to look at the Native Linux stuff first.
Ah yes, Dragons, that classical game genre.
The machine learning part is... not ideal. I have the opinion that, if my personal data is going to be used to generate recommendations I should be the one controlling that. Which means it should run locally, with no one else having my data, and I should be able to change the parameters as I wish - granularly remove any data I don't want to be used, filter what games can be recommended (by price, OS, DRM and etc), and so on.
But can I have a new Valve ARG?
Please.
QuoteThe first three experiments
So they CAN count to three...
The Quad video thing was my favorite.
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