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43 votes
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Humble Choice - April 2024
April 2024's Humble Choice is now available with the following eight Steam games. Steam Page Opencritic Steam Recent/All Operating Systems Steam Deck ProtonDB Victoria 3 82 67/66 Win, Mac, Linux π¨...
April 2024's Humble Choice is now available with the following eight Steam games.
Steam Page Opencritic Steam Recent/All Operating Systems Steam Deck ProtonDB Victoria 3 82 67/66 Win, Mac, Linux π¨ Playable β Native The Callisto Protocol 67 75/64 Win β Verified ποΈ Platinum HUMANKIND: Definitive Edition 79 69/66 Win, Mac π¨ Playable π¨ Gold Fashion Police Squad 78 92 Win π¨ Playable ποΈ Platinum Terraformers 80 89/88 Win, Mac, Linux β Verified β Native Symphony of War: The Nephilim Saga 84 95/95 Win β Verified ποΈ Platinum Coromon 73 77/87 Win, Mac β Verified π¨ Gold The Excavation of Hob's Barrow 84 90/93 Win, Mac, Linux β Verified β Native Does anyone have experience with any of the games and, if so, would you recommend them? Is there anything in here that you're particularly excited to play?
13 votes -
Introducing Steam Families
71 votes -
Steam Spring Sale suggestions
Steam Sale time again! Post any amazing games or hidden gems you think others would like. I'll start: Mr Shifty is an amazing 2d top-down that's crazy fun (especially for its price!). I'm about to...
Steam Sale time again! Post any amazing games or hidden gems you think others would like. I'll start: Mr Shifty is an amazing 2d top-down that's crazy fun (especially for its price!). I'm about to get a SteamDeck, so am hunting these style of games in particular.
42 votes -
Rimworld - Anomaly expansion and update 1.5 announced
31 votes -
Humble Choice - March 2024
March 2024's Humble Choice is now available with the following eight Steam games. Steam Page Opencritic Steam Recent/All Operating Systems Steam Deck ProtonDB Warhammer Age of Sigmar: Realms of...
March 2024's Humble Choice is now available with the following eight Steam games.
Steam Page Opencritic Steam Recent/All Operating Systems Steam Deck ProtonDB Warhammer Age of Sigmar: Realms of Ruin β Ultimate Edition 70 41/60 Win β Unknown π¨ Gold Nioh 2 - The Complete Edition 85 87/88 Win π¨ Playable π¨ Gold Saints Row 63 56/64 Win β Unsupported π¨ Gold Citizen Sleeper 84 91/94 Win, Mac π¨ Playable ποΈ Platinum Black Skylands 77 80/82 Win β Verified π¨ Gold Soulstice 71 70/78 Win π¨ Playable ποΈ Platinum Afterimage 76 77/80 Win β Verified π¨ Gold Destroyer: The U-Boat Hunter N/A 68/77 Win π¨ Playable π¨ Gold Does anyone have experience with any of the games and, if so, would you recommend them? Is there anything in here that you're particularly excited to play?
14 votes -
Stardew Valley 1.6 release date announced: March 19th
60 votes -
Surviving the Steam Next Fest | Cold Take
7 votes -
Defeat Clintin the mini-boss in new βEpsteinβ island game on Steam
6 votes -
Humble Choice - February 2024
February 2024's Humble Choice is now available with the following eight Steam games. Steam Page Opencritic Steam Recent/All Operating Systems Steam Deck ProtonDB Life Is Strange: True Colors 81...
February 2024's Humble Choice is now available with the following eight Steam games.
Steam Page Opencritic Steam Recent/All Operating Systems Steam Deck ProtonDB Life Is Strange: True Colors 81 89/90 Win β Verified π¨ Gold Scorn 68 77/82 Win β Verified ποΈ Platinum Destroy All Humans! 2 - Reprobed 68 78/73 Win β Verified ποΈ Platinum Beacon Pines 81 98/97 Win β Verified ποΈ Platinum There Is No Light: Enhanced Edition N/A 74/81 Win β Verified ποΈ Platinum Children of Silentown 70 87/81 Win β Verified ποΈ Platinum Oaken 77 81 Win, Mac, Linux β Unknown β Native Snowtopia: Ski Resort Builder N/A 65 Win π¨ Playable ποΈ Platinum Does anyone have experience with any of the games and, if so, would you recommend them? Is there anything in here that you're particularly excited to play?
12 votes -
Steam Next Fest: what have you been playing?
For those out of the loop, Steam Next Fest is a week long event (Feb. 5 - Feb. 12) celebrating upcoming games through demos and developer livestreams. Which demos have you been playing, and which...
For those out of the loop, Steam Next Fest is a week long event (Feb. 5 - Feb. 12) celebrating upcoming games through demos and developer livestreams.
Which demos have you been playing, and which releases are you looking forward to?
30 votes -
73% of the top 1000 games on Steam run on the Steam Deck
48 votes -
Prison Architect 2 - Coming March 26th! | Announcement trailer
9 votes -
Why more PC gaming handhelds should ditch Windows for SteamOS
21 votes -
There has never been a better time to game on Linux
I've been running Linux full-time pretty much since Valve released Proton. I remember submitting reports to ProtonDB back when it was just a shared Google Sheet! In the years that followed I made...
I've been running Linux full-time pretty much since Valve released Proton. I remember submitting reports to ProtonDB back when it was just a shared Google Sheet! In the years that followed I made it a point to test and report out on different games as new versions of Proton were released and support improved. I thought it important that we have a good data set for what worked and what didn't. Over those years I tested hundreds of games and submitted as many reports to the database.
In thinking back over my gaming in 2023, however, I realized that I fell out of the habit of submitting reports because I'm so used to Proton working that it's stopped occurring to me that it might not.
That doesn't mean that there aren't some games that don't work -- it simply means that the success rate that I used to have (maybe 30-50% on average) has risen high enough that I'm genuinely surprised if something doesn't work (it's probably somewhere around 95% for me now, though that's biased by the types of games that I play). I actually tried to remember the last game that didn't work, and I genuinely couldn't tell you what it was. Everything I've played recently has booted like it's native.
Honestly, I genuinely don't even know which games are native and which run through Proton anymore. I've stopped caring!
I got my Steam Deck halfway through 2022. It was awesome, but it was definitely a bit rough around the edges. There weren't that many compatible games. The OS had some clunkiness. It matured though, and has gotten better. Among my friend group, I'm the only person who cares even a little bit about Linux. If you asked any of them to name three different Linux distributions they'd stare at you blankly because they wouldn't understand the question. Nevertheless, of my friends, SIX of them have Steam Decks and are now gaming regularly on Linux.
There are currently ~4,300 Deck Verified games and ~8,700 Deck Playable games according to Valve. On ProtonDB, ~8,600 games have been verified as working on Linux by at least three users, while ~19,700 games have been verified by at least one user. There is SO much variety available, and the speed with which we've gotten here has been pretty breathtaking.
This was my device breakdown for my Steam Replay for 2023:
- 55% Steam Deck
- 32% Linux
- 10% Virtual Reality
- 4% Windows
The only non-Linux gaming I did was VR and some local multiplayer stuff I have on a Windows machine hooked up to my TV.
I don't want to proselytize too much, but if you have a general interest in gaming, you could probably switch over to Linux full time and be perfectly happy with the variety of games you have available to you. Not too long ago, making the jump felt like a huge sacrifice because you'd be giving up so much -- SO many games were incompatible -- but it no longer feels that way. You can transfer and most of -- probably almost all -- your library will still work! Also, if a particular game doesn't work, there isn't too much sting because, well, there are thousands of others you can give your attention to.
If you have a specific game that you must play, then it's possibly a different story. If you love Destiny 2, for example, then full-time Linux definitely is not for you. The same goes VR -- it's simply not up to snuff on Linux yet. There are other niches too that don't transfer over as well (modding, racing sims, etc.) so, of course, this isn't a blanket recommendation and everyone's situation is different.
But for a prototypical person who's just your sort of general, everyday gamer? It's reached a point where they could be very happy on Linux. In fact, as proven by my friends and their Steam Decks, it's reached a point where people can be gaming on Linux and not even know they're doing that. That's how frictionless it's gotten!
I don't really have a point to this post other than to say it's incredible that we are where we are, and I'm beyond appreciative of all the effort that people have put in to making this possible.
83 votes -
Steam has cut support for Windows 7, 8, and 8.1
40 votes -
Eight questions for anyone who has developed a game (especially with Unity's Engine)
(I already wrote this once, but my phone didn't like it and randomly deleted the whole thing... ββ©β ) I've been wanting to develop some games for a while now, and I have an overarching theme idea...
(I already wrote this once, but my phone didn't like it and randomly deleted the whole thing... ββ©β )
I've been wanting to develop some games for a while now, and I have an overarching theme idea in mind. I couldn't decide on top down pixelated game or 3D style, because it's more of a visual story kind of game, where you explore, build a base (or several), meet and talk to NPCs, learn the story, etc. I want a lot of detail but I only have (minimal) experience with pixelated games. So naturally, 3D sounds better for a higher detailed, and maybe stylized environment.
I don't know much at all about code ( for example, I had to look up how to format this post). I don't even know what languages there are other than Java. I make resourcepacks for Minecraft, but that's minimal coding for the .mcmeta file. I do also make fabric mods for it, but I use MCreator for those, which I'm sure is like training wheels for coding.
I have the skills for graphics for both characters/environments and GUI/HUD elements. I have an idea for my story, and a few ideas for characters. What I know I don't have is experience in balancing things like economies, rpg skills, fighting, and weapons/armor and their upgrades. But I'm not really planning on implementing those, at least not right now. (The economy would be first if I did)
I recently saw a video on youtube showcasing Unity Engine's nanite environments, and basically, I want in on that. They're gorgeous.
The Questions
So my 8 questions are, on a scale of one to ten (ten being basically impossible for one single person to do), how difficult would it be to make these elements in a singleplayer, 3D game for someone without experience (like me):
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Sky, ground, objects (like trees, flowers, rocks, etc) and other environment visuals' 3D models for exploration? I need to be able to walk on it, and maybe hit things like trees for lumber.
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Base building and gathering the materials to build? This comes with the inventory issue as well (looking at you, Minecraft), which I'm still trying to figure out how I want to do this.
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Crafting said gathered materials for building elements and items to gift to NPCs? This will need GUI and workbench, most likely.
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Collectibles? Think koroks from BoTW or the museum artifacts in Stardew Valley. I'd like for the player to be able to display these only in/on a shelf/table/glass case inside their base(s).
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NPCs with many hours worth of randomized dialogue interaction, gifts to and from NPCs, as well as a few friendship levels and unlockable interactions/gifts?
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What would the time frame look like for me to learn Unity's Engine for these elements, or is there a better engine I should be aware of?
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What materials might you guess that I'd need to spend money on to make this game? I already have: a Mac, the Adobe Suite, a drawing tablet, all the time in the world, and ideas. Would I need a license for anything?
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What have I overlooked? 3D modeling (and not just blocky models in blockbench) is a skill I realized I'd need to learn just as I was writing this post.
The reason I'm asking so many questions is because I can't tell if trying this will be worth my time or not, and if I could afford to hire someone for parts of it, if need be. I have ADHD, so I'm wondering if this is just the "new shiny thing" that has caught my eye (probably is). I don't want to dive into a major learning session and project development if it ultimately won't go anywhere because it's too hard for my smooth brain.
Then again, I see some games (what I would consider low quality) that I'm like, "man, I could've done that, that looks so simple and easy!" So basically I have no idea whether I'm near the peak of Mt Stupid on the Dunning-Kreuger graph, or if I'm past it and somewhere in the valley.
Any advice is greatly appreciated.
Also, feel free to talk to me like I'm a dumb 5 year old.
6 votes -
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Steam Winter Sale 2023: Hidden gems
Inspired by the recurring topic every Steam sale over at /r/GameDealsMeta: What are some lesser-known Steam games that you recommend? Are there any genres youβd like hidden gem recommendations...
Inspired by the recurring topic every Steam sale over at /r/GameDealsMeta:
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What are some lesser-known Steam games that you recommend?
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Are there any genres youβd like hidden gem recommendations for?
Thereβs no hard requirement for what counts as a βhidden gem.β Any game that you think deserves more attention counts.
For general and popular game recommendations for the sale, please use this topic instead.
79 votes -
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The Steam Winter Sale has begun (Dec 21st - Jan 4th)
42 votes -
Steam year in review 2023
18 votes -
Humble Choice - December 2023
Sorry for the delay in posting this month. December's Humble Choice is now available with the following eight Steam games: Steam Page Opencritic Steam Recent/All Operating Systems Steam Deck...
Sorry for the delay in posting this month.
December's Humble Choice is now available with the following eight Steam games:
Steam Page Opencritic Steam Recent/All Operating Systems Steam Deck ProtonDB Expeditions: Rome 81 82/88 Win Playable Platinum Midnight Fight Express 76 82/91 Win Verified Gold ELEX II 65 61/75 Win Unsupported Gold Nobody Saves the World 80 87/91 Win Verified Platinum The Gunk 70 86/86 Win Playable Platinum The Pale Beyond 78 96/91 Win Mac Verified Platinum Last Call BBS TBC 95/95 Win Mac Lin Playable Native From Space TBC 88/67 Win Verified Platinum Does anyone have experience with any of the games and, if so, would you recommend them? Is there anything in here that you're particularly excited to play?
14 votes -
T minus Zero, or releasing a game on Steam
Well, a few minutes ago I finally pushed the button, the game is released. So I wanted to write a short write up of some things that I had to do to release the game. I won't really talk about...
Well, a few minutes ago I finally pushed the button, the game is released. So I wanted to write a short write up of some things that I had to do to release the game. I won't really talk about making the game itself too much, more about the part of actually releasing the game, if you are interested in more of that you can see my posts from Timasomo (1, 2, 3, 4, showcase).
Steam
I have already created many games in the past, I've been making games for more than 5 years, but always as a hobbyist. So I never experienced releasing a game on a platform like Steam. I have to say working with Steam and Steamworks is very pleasant and streamlined, but it is still much more complex than for example releasing a game on itch.io, which is what I did before for all my other games. I'll try to summarize how the process looks like.
First, before you can even get on Steam, you have to register, fill out a ton of paperwork, wait some time for it to be manually approved. Afterwards, you have to pay the 100 dollars for Steam Direct. At this point you finally get a Steam app id, which you can use to start integrating Steam features into your game. For example, having achievements, Steam cloud integration (so the saves get synced between devices), leaderboards and potentially more, especially if you are making a multiplayer game. To make my game I am using Godot, and I found a C# library called Facepunch.Steamworks which made this all quite easy, I'd definitely recommend it if you are using Unity or Godot with C# and want to release your game on Steam.
Before releasing a game on Steam you also have to finish everything on a gigantic checklist, including things like: uploading 10 various header, capsule and other images which are used on the store page and Steam library. An icon for the game. What are the minimum requirements required to run the game, whether the game has adult content, whether it supports controllers, how much the game will cost, screenshots, a trailer, there are just so many things to do! And when you complete parts of this checklist you have to have your game go through manual reviews. Each review could take about 3 days to get done. I failed one review first so I had to resubmit it too and wait again. Let me tell you, if you plan to release a game on Steam, reserve at least a month to do it, and start going through the reviews as soon as possible -- actually I think there even is a minimum of a month before you can release the game from the day you get an app id.
Trailer
Creating a good trailer is super hard. I am not a video creator/editor at all, but luckily I at least own a solid program for creating videos -- Vegas 14 pro, that I got for super cheap in some Humble bundle about 8 or something years ago, so I at least had a good start there. I ended up with not that complex of a project and Vegas still kept crashing when rendering, so I am not sure if I'd recommend it though.
The hardest thing for a trailer is deciding what to put in it for me. I know that a trailer should be super short, should showcase how the gameplay looks, what are the features and so on, but when I got to actually making it, it was still super hard to decide what to put there. How do I even start? I watched a ton of other indie game trailers to get some inspiration and that also didn't help that much. There are some trailers which are really just gameplay, some trailers which are actually just incredible with editing I could never do as a pleb... So I started with something that I know a bit more. I created a very short music track, and decided that I will just edit the trailer to fit the music.
The music track basically splits the trailer into 4/5 very short sections:
- Basic gameplay, how the game looks when you start playing it
- Explaining the roguelite part of the game, selecting spells and items
- More complex gameplay, how some combinations of spells and items can look later in a run
- List of features
- Special bonus ending section showing a "Legendary" spell, which should show how insane spells can get, followed by the logo of the game
I think the trailer ended up being not too bad, but I still had some feedback that it isn't flashy enough. And it's true, but I am not really sure how to improve it easily. When watching the Vampire Survivors trailer for example I can see that they did a much better job: it's so much more dynamic, the music really pumps you up, it's overall better edited, it has cool transitions, camera movement and so on.
End
Releasing a game on Steam was a great experience. I learned so much! I basically made this game over weekends and evenings, since I also have a job. To try maintain my productivity I tried to do at least some work on the game every single day. I have to say that towards the end I started losing some steam (haha), some days scrambling to do at least something late in the evening before I went to sleep. But, if at least someone plays the game I think I want to keep updating it more, I still do really like the game!
Thanks for reading! Feel free to ask me anything about the game, or the game dev process, or about anything basically haha.
Here's the Steam store page, the game costs 5 dollars, I'd love it if you checked it out. If you want to play the game but can't afford it PM me and I'll send you a key for the game (at least once I get the keys I requested -- did you know that Steam has to approve the creation of keys manually? Edit: the keys are now ready)
https://store.steampowered.com/app/2682910/The_Spellswapper/45 votes -
The Jingle Jam 2023 charity Steam game bundle
10 votes -
Play Steam VR games on Meta Quest 2, 3, and Pro
28 votes -
Baldur's Gate 3 Patch 5 is live - includes an additional epilogue
23 votes -
Steam Autumn Sale 2023 is up! (November 21st to November 28th)
33 votes -
Controller support shown in Steam library and store expands to now include PlayStation controllers
32 votes -
Portal: Revolution | Trailer
21 votes -
Half-Life: 25th anniversary update
57 votes -
Armor Games Studios publisher sale
18 votes -
Steam Deck users, has anyone found a compact docking setup?
I live in a pretty compact house, and have my work office upstairs in a corner of one of my kids bedrooms. Obviously, gaming in there after they are asleep is a no go! Our one tv is usually given...
I live in a pretty compact house, and have my work office upstairs in a corner of one of my kids bedrooms.
Obviously, gaming in there after they are asleep is a no go! Our one tv is usually given over to my wife on evenings I break out the Steam Deck - which has been my first foray back into gaming since having kids and I'm thoroughly enjoying it.
However, I'm interested if anyone has found a neat solution to use it in e.g. desktop mode without a conventional monitor or TV to dock with, that I could break out quickly on a breakfast bar and then stow easily.
I'm envisaging some kinda of Frankensteined cheap laptop shell housing to contain the screen and keyboard-
Steam Deck -> USB C Dock -> HDMI out to laptop screen and USB out to keyboard.
Anyone familiar with something resembling this kind of setup, or something similar?
19 votes -
Bought my first Steam Deck after seeing the deep discounts on refurbs...what should i know as a first time Steam Deck/PC gamer?
As title says, once Valve announced the OLED deck, I saw the refurbished originals go on a deep discount and figured it was time to buy in. So I ordered a refurb 512GB and Iβm so excited for it to...
As title says, once Valve announced the OLED deck, I saw the refurbished originals go on a deep discount and figured it was time to buy in. So I ordered a refurb 512GB and Iβm so excited for it to arrive! Been in a gaming rut for a long time now and, having never been a PC gamer, Iβm look forward to checking out a bunch of games Iβve never played before.
What tips do you have for a first time Deck owner?
Any essential games I should be sure to get?
And finally, is it possible to get games I own on the Epic Games Store (I collected all their free games over the years) or Xbox Game Pass PC games on my Steam Deck?
44 votes -
Introducing Steam Deck OLED - November 16
61 votes -
Steam might let you hide those embarrassing games in your profile soon
47 votes -
Humble Choice - November 2023
November's Humble Choice is now available with the following eight Steam games: Steam Page Opencritic Steam Recent/All Operating Systems Steam Deck ProtonDB Hardspace: Shipbreaker 83 88/89 Win...
November's Humble Choice is now available with the following eight Steam games:
Steam Page Opencritic Steam Recent/All Operating Systems Steam Deck ProtonDB Hardspace: Shipbreaker 83 88/89 Win Verified Gold WWE 2K23 81 77/81 Win Unsupported Platinum Unpacking 83 94/92 Win Mac Lin Verified Native Friends vs Friends TBC 85/81 Win Verified Gold The Legend of Tianding 81 97/95 Win Verified Platinum SCP: Secret Files TBC 89/89 Win Playable Gold Souldiers 76 80/65 Win Verified Gold Prodeus 82 90/93 Win Mac Playable Platinum Does anyone have experience with any of the games and, if so, would you recommend them? Is there anything in here that you're particularly excited to play?
11 votes -
Valve doesn't sell ad space on Steam so it can make room for surprise hits: 'We don't think Steam should be pay-to-win'
76 votes -
DREDGE: The Pale Reach
7 votes -
Humble Choice - October 2023
October's Humble Choice is now available with the following eight Steam games: Steam Page Opencritic Steam Recent/All Operating Systems Steam Deck ProtonDB The Quarry Deluxe Edition 79 85/80 Win...
October's Humble Choice is now available with the following eight Steam games:
Steam Page Opencritic Steam Recent/All Operating Systems Steam Deck ProtonDB The Quarry Deluxe Edition 79 85/80 Win Unsupported Gold Metal Hellsinger 79 97/97 Win Playable Gold Dark Pictures Anthology: House of Ashes 73 94/88 Win Playable Platinum Rebel Inc: Escalation N/A 88/83 Win Mac Playable Gold Spirit of the Island N/A 78/71 Win Verified Gold Lords and Villeins TBC 36/77 Win Playable Platinum A Juggler's Tale 71 100/95 Win Verified Platinum Mr. Prepper TBC 75/82 Win Playable Platinum Does anyone have experience with any of the games and, if so, would you recommend them? Is there anything in here that you're particularly excited to play?
14 votes -
DREDGE - The Iron Rig DLC delayed to 2024
7 votes -
The Talos Principle is on sale for 90% off on Steam
62 votes -
Steam's oldest user accounts turn 20, Valve celebrates with special digital badges
46 votes -
Humble Choice - September 2023
September's Humble Choice is now available with the following eight Steam games: Steam Page Opencritic Steam Recent/All Operating Systems Steam Deck ProtonDB Tiny Tina's Wonderlands Chaotic Great...
September's Humble Choice is now available with the following eight Steam games:
Steam Page Opencritic Steam Recent/All Operating Systems Steam Deck ProtonDB Tiny Tina's Wonderlands Chaotic Great Edition 78 72/76 Win Verified Platinum Deceive Inc. 72 80/86 Win Verified Gold The Forgotten City 84 93/96 Win Verified Platinum Aces & Adventures TBC 97/91 Win Playable Platinum Patch Quest 81 100/95 Win Verified Gold Foretales 75 88 Win Playable Platinum Who Pressed Mute on Uncle Marcus 76 73 Win Mac Verified TBC Autonauts vs Piratebots TBC 84 Win Playable Platinum Does anyone have experience with any of the games and, if so, would you recommend them? Is there anything in here that you're particularly excited to play?
19 votes -
Sea of Stars, a Chrono Trigger inspired game, has released today
44 votes -
What are your thoughts on DREDGE?
18 votes -
Vampire Survivors - Version 1.6: New engine and local co-op
32 votes -
Humble Choice - August 2023
August's Humble Choice is now available with the following eight Steam games: Steam Page Opencritic Steam Recent/All Operating Systems Steam Deck ProtonDB Disco Elysium β The Final Cut 89 93/93...
August's Humble Choice is now available with the following eight Steam games:
Steam Page Opencritic Steam Recent/All Operating Systems Steam Deck ProtonDB Disco Elysium β The Final Cut 89 93/93 Win Mac Verified Gold Chivalry 2 82 81/82 Win Unsupported* Silver Trek to Yomi 72 70/71 Win Playable Platinum Road 96 78 92/91 Win Verified Platinum Arcade Paradise 76 90/89 Win Verified Platinum SuchArt: Genius Artist Simulator N/A 100/98 Win Verified Platinum Tin Can TBC 87 Win Playable Platinum Hot Brass TBC 82 Win Unsupported* Platinum *Both games that are marked as unsupported on Steam Deck on Steam itself are reported as working on Linux on ProtonDB.
Does anyone have experience with any of the games and, if so, would you recommend them? Is there anything in here that you're particularly excited to play?
27 votes -
The Summer Backlog Battle: Play your Steam backlog to benefit No Kid Hungry
19 votes -
Tutorial: Ensure a Steam game/mods are up-to-date each time you play
8 votes -
Blizzardβs bringing its PC games to Steam, starting with Overwatch 2
37 votes -
Japanese Steam user number reaches record high in June
19 votes