With a peak concurrent user count of over 272,000 on Steam on its launch day, Halo Infinite has already become Xbox Game Studios' most successful game ever on the platform.
Valve confirms its upcoming handheld gaming PC has been delayed past its original December launch by two months.
Giant Squid's epic action adventure title has previously been exclusive to the Epic Games Store on PC. It's also out on PS4, PS5 and iOS.
Several games using Denuvo's DRM had been rendered unplayable, presumably due to domain name expiration issues.
That's almost double the all-time peak of Age of Empires 2: Definitive Edition, which is 38,275 players according to SteamDB.
The short answer is yes, yes they should.
A recent SteamDB listing has been found with apparent references to Sumo Digital, the game's developer, among other things.
Each Steam game will be given one of four categorizations depending on whether or not it can run on the portable device.
Steam has banned all blockchain-based games that use cryptocurrencies and NFTs from its platform, presumably due to a potential threat of scamming.
Season 1, The Cloudy Climb, brings a Premium Pass that players can level up to earn various cosmetics like emotes, skins and pets.
The 10 GB demo offers quests to hunt Great Izuchi, Mizutsune, and Magnamalo with no limit on the number of attempts.
Valve opens up its handheld PC, discusses what it contains, why you really shouldn't be messing with its components and much more.
Hunts with Mizutsune and Magnamalo are showcased along with some settings. The PC version is out on January 12th 2022.
Malzeno is the latest Elder Dragon to join the game while "several" monsters from previous titles, like Shogun Ceanataur, are returning.
High-resolution textures and 21:9 Ultrawide display support will also be included with a free demo coming to Steam on October 13th.
Valve is actually working on a way to deal with "unowned content" and helping its partners remove builds for things like "copyright issues."
However, user reviews are currently "mixed" with only 53 percent being positive and complaints centering on long server queues.
Valve confirms in a handy FAQ that the Steam Deck can be used as a controller while playing games on PC via remote play.
The action RPG looter is available in its base version and in an Ultimate Edition which contains all of its paid DLC along with other goodies.
A report by Tooltester reveals that Steam experiences more outages than PlayStation Network and Xbox Live on average.