Steam, Valve’s widely used PC gaming platform, has officially hit a major milestone, surpassing 40 million concurrent users for the first time ever.
The previous record was just shy of 39 million in December 2024, but Steam has now reached 40.27 million concurrent users, according to Valve’s own data, while SteamDB reports slightly lower at 40.27 million. Regardless, both sources confirm this historic achievement.
For perspective, this user count places Steam just behind Canada’s 41 million population and ahead of Uzbekistan’s 37 million. This makes Steam’s current concurrent user count larger than that of over 80% of the countries in the United Nations. Ten years ago, Steam had only 8.9 million concurrent users, a number that already felt significant at the time.
Looking at active monthly users, Valve’s 2021 report shows that Steam had 132 million monthly players by the end of that year, with a peak concurrent record of 27.4 million.
If this ratio remains consistent, the current estimate for Steam’s active monthly user count is about 221.5 million, more than the population of Brazil, Russia, or Mexico. This milestone underscores the rapid growth of PC gaming, especially compared to the stagnation in the console market.
With only 336 employees as of 2021, Valve’s impressive influence in the gaming industry is clear, even outpacing major companies like EA and Ubisoft, which have struggled to make a significant impact in the digital storefront market.