Two quick bits of Steam news to cover this wonderful Monday morning. As expected, Steam does still appear to be growing.
SteamDB made a Twitter post yesterday to note that the previous historic concurrent user count on Steam set back in January 2018 of 18,537,490 was smashed to a new record of 18,801,944 online. A huge number of people of course but plenty are likely to be bots. What's interesting, is that against the same previous record, this year there were less people actually in-game. In January 2018 there were around 7 million in-game while this year with the new concurrent record only about 6 million were in-game.
While we're on the subject of Steam, their monthly Hardware Survey went out again and it showed Linux had risen to 0.9%. Going by our dedicated Steam Tracker, that's the highest it's been for at least 16 months now.
All good news as Valve continue putting resources into improving Linux gaming through funding graphics driver improvements for AMD, the new Container system, funding DXVK+Wine development for Proton, this new Gamescope and likely more to come still. We still need to find out what Steam Cloud Gaming is (#1, #2) which could see a reveal later this year perhaps.
As people keep reporting this behaviour, I wonder if they're just using older survey data from people who didn't change their system...
Last edited by Eike on 3 February 2020 at 9:46 am UTC
QuoteLinux had risen to 0.9%
... is this our Windows 7 harvest? ;)
(No, probably just China coughing. (*) )
(*) Erm, no pun intended. Really.
Last edited by Eike on 3 February 2020 at 10:56 am UTC
--edit--
Just for the public interest: I had no survey in this time - not on my TV nor on my Desktop
Last edited by logge on 4 February 2020 at 4:47 am UTC
Got the survey on both.
See more from me