Steam is one of the biggest gaming platforms, accruing well over 60 million people actively using it daily and 120 million users monthly. That makes Steam the most widely used and accessible marketplace on PC.
Warhammer 40,000: Boltgun 2 developers discuss the huge success of Space Marine 2 and its effect on the series as a whole.
Sector sat down with Glen Schofield—creator of Dead Space and The Callisto Protocol—during the Game Developers Session (GDS) in Prague to discuss the evolution of the game industry, the current challenges of AAA development, and why it's become so hard to get original ideas off the ground in today’s risk-averse environment.
It’s easy enough to say that, but why? It feels weird to me when developers say this but common sense would tell you everything about the idea itself should work.
The idea of the concept seems like a winner at whichever angle you look at it so why would publishers not greenlight it?
… it’s almost as if the majority of publishers are massively incompetent at their jobs. But there’s no surprise to anyone there.
Wccftech interviewed Koei Tecmo about their upcoming game WILD HEARTS S, gathering their first thoughts on the Nintendo Switch 2 console.
This new tech, in 2025, is more comparable to 2020 tech than 2013 tech.
*tip toes over that bar*
Also, why are all the comparisons to PS4 and not Xbox One?
I notice it always ps4 or ps4 pro but never xbox one x which is more powetful then the ps4 pro.
sooo ...
what this is telling us, is that it comes down to the game and the devs optimization.
I'm actually enjoying indies more than AAA games, started playing Dredge, didn't realise how fun it was going to be, still bloody playing it.
Of course it will. Everyone else’s UI sucks and all have a smaller selection. On consoles there’s so much QA, regulations, and approvals to get through. Only thing easier to get games on is probably the google play store. Therefor Steam is loaded with a metric ton of indies. Within that ton is a a portion that’s trash, hidden gem, outright gold, and games that make you WANT a bit more stringent QA system. Even that’s covered with returns though. Like i said, Steam appears impossible to beat. They are the Amazon of PC gaming. One stop shop.
Steam is so accessible though, being available pretty much everywhere, especially now the Deck is on the scene.
It's because their games are being rented instead of owned.
Itch.io is kinda indies' home, but the phrase seems kinda meaningless either way.