Steam has been seen developing a game price tracker aimed at helping patient gamers save some money.
Can Valve's 30-day price tracker meet the needs of Steam deal-seekers?
If you’ve ever purchased a game on Steam only to find it discounted shortly afterward, you understand the frustration. Valve may be addressing this issue with a potential solution. Reports from NotebookCheck indicate that code found in Steam’s backend hints at a forthcoming feature that tracks prices over the last 30 days. However, there has been no official announcement or timeline from Valve regarding this feature's release.
How will the price history feature function?
This price history feature is intended to show if a game's current price is the lowest it has been in the past month. It will also indicate when a game is on sale, display the percentage decrease from its original price, and assist you in deciding whether to wait for a Steam Sale or make an immediate purchase.
At present, there are third-party tools available, such as SteamDB and IsThereAnyDeal, that provide this kind of information, but having a built-in tracker on Steam would be much more user-friendly. Still, it might not fully meet the expectations of seasoned deal hunters.
Third-party platforms already provide historical low price information, allowing users to see a broader view of pricing trends. Relying solely on a 30-day timeframe may not help users determine if a game has ever been cheaper, which is a common concern among gamers. For the feature to effectively compete with existing tools, Valve would need to broaden its date range and filtering options significantly.
What other developments is Valve working on for Steam?
The price tracker isn’t the only feature Valve seems to be developing. A tool named "Frame Estimator" has also been detected in Steam’s code, which would estimate your PC’s expected frame rate performance for a game based on anonymized information gathered from other Steam users.
Additionally, Valve is reportedly working on SteamGPT, an AI system meant to assist with customer support inquiries related to refunds, platform issues, and payment concerns. While none of these projects have been officially confirmed yet, collectively they indicate that Valve is preparing for substantial upgrades, likely coinciding with the release of the Steam Machine, which is currently delayed due to ongoing RAM shortages.
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Steam has been seen developing a game price tracker aimed at helping patient gamers save some money.
Valve seems to be integrating a 30-day price history tracker into Steam, allowing users to view recent price reductions without exiting the application.
