It's truly hard to imagine just how much Valve managed to change what PC gaming is thanks to Steam. On September 12 2021, the Steam client celebrated 18 years. Steam is now old enough to buy alcohol in the UK.
Do you remember what Steam originally looked like? I sure do. It was a much simpler time, with none of the fancy tricks Steam does now. There was no Steam Play, no Linux client, no macOS client, no reviews system and just — not much of anything. A few games, a couple of buttons and that was mostly it. This was long before the likes of GOG, Humble, Epic, itch.io, Origin and so on.
Not only was it a bare-bones client, a lot of people really didn't like it either. This was back in the days where most people went into a real-life game store, picked up a box and took it home to insert a CD and read the manual while it took forever to install. The idea of needing the internet and a client to register and play was just weird. Back then Steam had a bit of a history for being unreliable too, with all sorts of server and login issues.
It wasn't long until Steam was a requirement with Half-Life 2 releasing in 2004, which truly set the stage for PC gaming digital distribution from that point to slowly become the norm. Later in 2005, the first externally developed titles arrived on Steam like Rag Doll Kung Fu but Steam remained a firmly closed system with Valve firmly curating the titles until later in 2012 when Steam Greenlight appeared for indies to submit their games, get votes and eventually (hopefully) get accepted.
Things are vastly different now of course. There's over 51,000 games on Steam and thousands release every year, thanks to Steam Direct allowing developers to pay $100 to get their game listed.
Looking at my own purchase history, looks like Day of Defeat: Source was actually my first purchase on my own account back in 2008. What was yours?
Happy Birthday, Steam.
I still vaguely remember making a steam account back then to play a beta release I think of Counter-Strike.
I also missed the fact that we lost those cool console message from WON when Steam went live for everyone. Just made things less cool and more streamlined which is off course a good thing, but seeing those console messages before joining a server just added to the experience.
As previously mentioned, my account also has more time lived on Linux than on Windows - amazing times.
Last edited by kellerkindt on 14 September 2021 at 7:39 am UTC
Last edited by THE0R on 13 September 2021 at 9:06 pm UTC
My first purchase was Half life - complete, followed by Sir you are being Hunted. I have been hooked ever since.
First purchases on Steam: Bastion, Dust, The Witcher 2 and Civilization V.
happy birthday steam.
1. I mean 1. we all love you.. thank you valve..
I am pretty sure I had some Steam games before that though, such as Dark Messiah of Might & Magic...
I was playing on windows counter-strike since beta 5.0 ( a time where dual berettas and automatic sniper rifles were not in the game ).
PLayed a lot of CS 1.5 and 1.6 on steam ( day one steam account ).
It's only recently that i migrated fully to linux ^^( almost exclusively, there still are some games i can't play on linux )
Quoting: ElectroDDI have the 18 years badge...
Do you happen to know how rare that is?
Quoting: EikeQuoting: ElectroDDI have the 18 years badge...
Do you happen to know how rare that is?
I have the 16 year badge right now, which will turn 17 mid November... but to have an 18 year badge only 2 days after Steam itself turned 18 requires you to have signed up for it practically on the day of its release. It must be incredibly rare.
Last edited by Eike on 14 September 2021 at 12:24 pm UTC
Quoting: kellerkindtSo next up is the Steam Linux half-time celebration, where steam is half of it's life available on Linux (since Feb 14, 2013).
@Liam, you must not miss this one!
If I (and LibreOffice) didn't miscalculate, 14th of Feb 2013 minus 12th of Sep 2003 is 3443 days, so the "break even" should be 20th of July in 2022. Which is incredible, as it feels like Steam is there forever, and while Steam for Linux doesn't feel brandnew anymore, I can still remember well how surprised I was when I first read about it.
So then a while after I started following GoL, there was all this talk about how Linux was getting a Steam client, and this was supposed to be a big deal. I rapidly assimilated why it was a big deal, and a while after that it showed up on my distro as a thing you could just install, and Valve was pushing Linux, and there were games, commercial games I wanted to play, actually available by pressing a button! It was a breakthrough moment for me. I had basically played zero computer games since Loki went belly up.
Now I'm so used to Steam that it weirds me out when I'm trying to think of something family members could get me for Christmas and I say "Well, um, you could go on Steam and buy me a game" and they're like "What's Steam?" and I realize it's possible to not know . . . like I didn't back when the Linux client first arrived.
Quoting: scaineQuoting: EikeQuoting: ElectroDDI have the 18 years badge...
Do you happen to know how rare that is?
I have the 16 year badge right now, which will turn 17 mid November... but to have an 18 year badge only 2 days after Steam itself turned 18 requires you to have signed up for it practically on the day of its release. It must be incredibly rare.
Serious Sam 3 BFE - $9.99 USD
Red Orchestra - $4.99 USD
Darwinia - $2.49 USD
Multiwinia - $2.49 USD
Killing Floor - $4.99 USD
Quoting: NodPurchased: Dec 24, 2012 @ 1:31pm
Serious Sam 3 BFE - $9.99 USD
Red Orchestra - $4.99 USD
Darwinia - $2.49 USD
Multiwinia - $2.49 USD
Killing Floor - $4.99 USD
A little christmas pressie from you... to you!
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