Where has all that time gone? It's pretty hard to believe that it was 20 years ago that Steam arrived, and with it that glorious green interface.
They weren't even close to being the first digital store to provide games, but requiring Steam to run Half-Life 2 regardless of digital purchase or a boxed copy was likely the defining moment that helped push it to success for Valve. This was likely my own introduction to Steam as well, back in the day where my PC could only just about run Half-Life 2 when you had long loading screens between sections. How time flies huh?
Pictured - Steam homepage back in 2004 after Half-Life 2 released
Valve has a long colourful history of expanding Steam from a basic launcher to a full store and later adding in the Steam Workshop, Early Access, Greenlight, Steam Direct, User Reviews, Virtual Reality, Steam Machines, Steam Deck, Remote Play, Points Shop, Movies and TV, Soundtracks and the list goes on and on.
Not everything Valve has tried went well like the original Steam Machines, and killing off their ambitions for non-gaming video content but they keep on trying and expanding and it seems there's really no stopping it. It grows every year with Valve's 2022 overview noting they had seen 83,000 new first-time purchasers every day of the year.
Naturally, without Steam and Valve, Linux gaming wouldn't be where it is today so we're doubly thankful for its existence. Just look at how Valve's Proton has changed things in the last 5 years.
Whatever will they announce next — more new hardware perhaps?
Do you have any especially fond memories of Steam over the years? Share them in the comments.
Quoting: pbInteresting. My steam account turns 10 tomorrow. ;-)I really wish I knew the login for my original account, but it has been lost to time :'(
Happy birthday Steam! I hope you will support Linux in future as you do now!
Quoting: Liam DaweQuoting: pbInteresting. My steam account turns 10 tomorrow. ;-)I really wish I knew the login for my original account, but it has been lost to time :'(
I created the account after HB delivered Shadow Warrior exclusively as a Steam key, to my annoyance. Now I'm more annoyed if the game is *not* delivered as a steam key. How the times change...
My steam account turns 20 next month........ I had to sign up to take part in a Counter-Strike clan war.......
I remember the frequent struggle keeping Steam working in Cedega. Finding and installing the Tahoma font for wine. The early days were really quite rough. I still have my Orange Box around here somewhere. My first games were imported from that.
I remember the excitement when I was included in the Linux beta (sorry work, I *cough* *cough* am not feeling well today).
I remember when I had more games on CD/DVD/direct download than on Steam. I still have shelves full of them but they are dwarfed by Steam keys now. It's really too much. I've never even launched some of them (blames Humble Bundle).
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