Little-known, underground indie videogame platform Steam sure is doing well for itself. The service recently hit a new historical high of 41,666,455 players online at once, per the stoic record-keepers over at . That's just a little over the population of Canada and a whole lot higher than the last time it graced our pages for breaking a concurrents record, which was last year when it hit a paltry, piddling, barely noticeable .
The new high score was hit, as you might expect, over a weekend. Last Sunday, to be precise: October 12, with a touch over 13 million players actually in-game. I'd venture to suggest that the release of Battlefield 6 had at least something to do with it. Last weekend was BF6's first, and with DICE's FPS currently on the Steam concurrent charts itself, there's likely some rummy nobel overlap there.
I confess, it does make me a little nervous. As billionaires go, Gabe Newell seems like the one who has deep-fried his brain the least of all of 'em, and Steam in general has never really done me wrong. Nevertheless, it Yono all app does feel like the platform's dominance represents all of us sticking our eggs in a single basket.
If Steam turned evil tomorrow, would I really be able to easily swap to something else and leave the friends and 1,000+ games I have on there behind?
It seems unlikely. Hell, I still use Google because it's all I've used since the late '90s, even as it becomes .