Steam user reviews have increased 370% since Library update – Now at 95 million active users

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8.44 user review score. Average score out of 10, based on 130 review scores” style=”background: #4db53c”>
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Valve has posted a pretty detailed look back at 2019 in its annual Year in Review post, delving into many of the changes it’s made on the front and back-end, including what worked and what didn’t, as well as paying impressively little attention to the very existence of the Epic Games Store.
One part which was particularly interesting though was in regards to the Steam Library update which was pushed out in September 2019. For the most part, the Steam Library interface had been the same for well over a decade. Valve added a new layout, an activity feed, additional tools to find games, and better surfacing of user-generated content. The upshot is that more games are being bought or wishlisted than ever before and, consequently, the updated Library has encouraged user reviews to balloon in popularity.
Prior to the Steam Library update, Valve said around 17,000 user game reviews were posted per day. Following the update, this figure has risen to 70,000 user reviews each and every day. That’s an increase of 370% from a single update. Considering the Epic Store doesn’t even offer the functionality for user reviews, this really is a case of Valve amplifying the strengths of its store.
In other areas, Steam Labs features such as the Micro Trailers and the Automatic Show, powered by machine learning, contributed to 2.7 billion impressions, 57 million views, and helped encourage 6.1 million wishlist additions for more than 29,000 games. Valve knows how to make money, as you well know, and it also knows how to try and get as many eyes on as many games as humanly possible. It’s impossible for all the great games to succeed, of course, there’s just too many of them, but features like this do help to overcome the barriers of market saturation.
Stats-wise, Steam now boasts 95 million monthly active users (MAU), who collectively played almost 21 billion hours on Steam throughout the year. That’s equivalent to 219 hours per user, per year, which are formidable figures. The new Steam Mobile Chat app was downloaded over 1 million times, a million mobile messages are sent per day, 3.7 million players used Remote Play, while a further 2.3 million took advantage of Remote Play Together.
You can see Valve’s full breakdown of 2019 for yourself here.
Looking forward, Valve is promising data deep dives on sales data and the health of the platform. This indicates Valve’s confidence in the ongoing success of Steam, effectively calling out third-party analysis based on “limited” data. It’s here where we’ll really find out whether competitor stores have really had an effect on Valve’s bottom line.
Better support for gaming soundtracks is coming, as is Steam VR 2.0, ‘Trust’ matchmaking which will attempt to filter trustworthy online players together, a refreshed Steam Mobile app and additional “top secret experiments” from Steam Labs.