Steam had more than 10 million active concurrent users over the weekend
Valve’s gaming platform Steam set a new record last weekend. There were a total of over ten million active concurrent users. It is the first time that this number of ten million has been broken.
This data is from the SteamDB website. According to that data, there was already a peak of 10,082,055 concurrent active users last Saturday afternoon. These are users who were actually actively engaged in a gaming session. The total number of concurrent users, including those who had not started any active sessions and were only logged in, was 32,186,301 players. A day later, on Sunday afternoon, that number rose further to a peak of 10,284,568 active concurrent users and a total of 33,078,963 concurrent users. These are the new record figures for the time being, but new records are regularly set on Steam.
The latter has to do with the fact that the number of users on Steam continues to rise steadily and has been the case for quite some time. Steam peaked at 10 million concurrent users for the first time in 2015. That was twelve years after Steam was born. The 20 million concurrent Steam users barrier was broken in March 2020, at the start of the pandemic. Due to the lockdowns, the number of concurrent Steam users grew quite rapidly. In January 2021, Steam passed the 25 million concurrent users mark and in October last year the 30 million mark was broken.
The games that were played the most over the past weekend are mainly the usual titles that are always at the top: Counter-Strike: Global Offensive and Dota 2. In third place is Goose Goose Duck, a clone of the game Among Us, followed by PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds, Apex Legends, Lost Ark, GTA V, Modern Warfare II and Warzone 2.0 combined, Rust and Wallpaper Engine.
Counter Strike: Global Offensive