Industry critiques Valve's Steam profitability data at GDC

Valve presented charts at GDC showing more games reaching $100,000 in annual revenue on Steam, from 3,000 in 2020 to 5,863 in 2025. Developers have criticized the data as misleading, citing doubled game releases to 19,997 in 2025 and the low threshold after Valve's 30% cut. Some defend Steam's discoverability amid market growth.

At last week's Game Developers Conference (GDC) in San Francisco, Valve's Tom Giardino and Kaci Aitchison Boyle shared data during a presentation. A bar chart indicated that the number of games earning over $100,000 yearly on Steam rose from 3,000 in 2020 to 5,863 in 2025. A secondary chart showed 2,395 games hit $500,000 in 2025, doubling the 2020 figure from the total pool of about 150,000 games on the platform. However, annual releases grew from 9,647 to 19,997 over the same period, keeping success rates steady in percentage terms. Critics noted inflation erodes the $100,000 figure's value—equivalent to $125,000 in 2020 dollars—and Valve's 30% cut leaves developers with roughly $70,000 before taxes, or about $50,000 net per Mike Rose of No More Robots. Rose called it 'a tricksy way to make it look like everything is fine,' adding that only 4% of games exceeded $100,000 in 2025. Indie developer Tom Sennett, creator of RunMan, described $100,000 as 'peanuts,' estimating 100,000 games earned nothing substantial. Simon Carless estimated just 29% of top earners (around 1,700) were 2025 releases, or 8.5% of that year's output, including long-tail titles like Counter-Strike and DOTA 2. Frozen Synapse developer Paul Kilduff-Taylor countered that consistent percentages amid rising volumes show Steam handles discoverability well, though he acknowledged game development's unpredictability. Valve has improved some backend tools, per developers speaking to outlets like Polygon, but frustrations persist over curation and promotions.

مقالات ذات صلة

Realistic photo illustration of a gaming setup displaying Steam survey results with Linux at 3.05% usage, driven by Steam Deck, for a news article on rising Linux adoption among gamers.
صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

استخدام لينكس على ستيم يصل إلى 3.05 في المئة

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

استطلاع أجهزة وبرمجيات ستيم لشهر أكتوبر 2025 من فالف يظهر ارتفاع استخدام لينكس إلى 3.05 في المئة بين مستخدمي ستيم، مما يمثل إنجازًا هامًا لنظام التشغيل مفتوح المصدر. هذا يمثل زيادة بنسبة 50 في المئة مقارنة بعام مضى، مدفوعًا بشكل كبير بجهاز ستيم ديك وتحسين توافق الألعاب. نتيجة لذلك، انخفض استخدام ويندوز إلى أقل من 95 في المئة.

In 2025, Steam saw a massive influx of 20,282 new game releases, yet just 608 of them achieved the milestone of 1,000 user reviews. An expert views this trend positively, suggesting it signals an indie golden age. The numbers indicate progress in the indie sector despite the volume.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Data shows that new releases on Steam in 2025 outperformed expectations, securing more spots in the top-grossing charts than the previous year. This shift highlights a stronger performance from fresh titles amid the usual stronghold of established live service games. Analysts suggest a combination of high-quality releases and pricing factors contributed to this trend.

An indie game, Super Battle Golf, has achieved remarkable success shortly after its release, selling 400,000 copies on Steam. Developed in just four and a half months with a small budget, the title surpassed 100,000 sales days after launch. The developers have announced plans for console versions and additional features.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

قامت فالفو بتحديث استطلاع أجهزة وبرمجيات ستيم لديسمبر 2025، مما رفع حصة سوق لينكس من 3.19 % إلى رقم قياسي قدره 3.58 %. يبرز هذا التعديل التبني المتزايد للينكس في الألعاب، مدفوعًا جزئيًا بستيم ديك. لا يزال ويندوز مسيطرًا بنسبة 94.23 %، مع ماك أو إس عند 2.18 %.

Valve has started its annual Steam Spring Sale, running until March 26. The event features discounts on numerous PC titles, from recent releases to older games. Highlights include Fallout: New Vegas for $1 and Elden Ring for $39.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

The UK's Competition Appeal Tribunal has ruled that a £656m lawsuit against Valve can move forward, potentially leading to compensation for 14 million Steam users. The case, filed by digital rights activist Vicki Shotbolt in June 2024, accuses Valve of anti-competitive practices that inflate PC game prices. Valve's bid to dismiss the claim was rejected on 26 January 2026.

 

 

 

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