Steam reached an all-time peak of 41,666,455 concurrent users on October 12, according to SteamDB. The spike arrived over a weekend, and the platform recorded more than 13 million players actually in-game at the high point. The surge followed a busy weekend for PC releases. Battlefield 6 had its first weekend online, and its Steam peak landed the game on the platform’s concurrent charts. Last year, Steam’s previous high was roughly over 36 million simultaneous users.
That growth matches broader market figures. A report earlier this year, titled “The State of Video Gaming in 2025,” noted that PC gaming revenue rose about 20 percent compared to recent years. Console launches and handheld PCs, such as the Steam Deck, play a part. For context on other prominent Steam peaks, take a look at the five Steam games with the biggest concurrent peaks.
There are significant outliers beyond traditional PC releases. Roblox reached a weekend peak that exceeded Steam’s earlier highs with 47.3 million players in a previous event. Millions of accounts, friend lists, and extensive libraries are tied to a single client, making switching costly. The situation echoes other tech habits where users stick with a dominant service even as it changes.
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