Steam's February 2026 Next Fest has drawn criticism from players and developers over a flood of demos featuring generative AI art without proper disclosure. Community members are resorting to sorting by popularity to avoid low-quality content, undermining the event's purpose of showcasing indie titles. Valve's disclosure system for AI use appears ineffective, leading to both genuine misuse and false accusations against legitimate creators.
Steam's tri-yearly Next Fest, a week-long event held in February 2026, features hundreds of demos from AAA and indie publishers. However, participants report an unprecedented influx of low-quality games using generative AI, often described as "slop" and asset-flipping titles. This issue, building on previous events, has led Reddit users to sort demos by popularity rather than exploring freely, which developers say defeats the promotional intent.
Players have voiced frustration on social media. Bucky from Palworld tweeted on February 24, 2026: "There are a zillion demos in this Steam Next Fest, and I'm going to be very real…I don't feel very compelled to check out demos with AI art capsules." Similarly, Mike Rose posted: "Scrolling through Next Fest demos, and the amount of AI key art is insane and of course, the store pages make no reference to AI being used cool cool cool."
Valve requires developers to disclose AI-generated assets on Steam pages, but many non-featured titles lack these tags despite suspicious visuals. One user noted: "There is no real penalty so far for not disclosing. Only if you blatantly used like LLM text generation at run time would Valve care and that’s just for legal reasons. For assets etc it’s very much a trust system by Valve, they mostly did it to shut people up."
Community suggestions include sorting by popularity and reviews to filter content, though one commenter highlighted the irony: "These last few fests I’ve just had to sort by popularity. But I feel like that defeats the purpose of these events if all I’m doing is ‘finding’ the stuff that I would’ve heard about anyway. It’s just too exhausting to filter through."
Indie developers face additional challenges from false accusations of AI use on subreddits like r/IndieDev and r/gamedev, complicating the event. Commenters argue the responsibility lies with Valve to enforce disclosures and distinguish genuine AI from handcrafted work more effectively.