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It seems developers aren't happy about how quickly titles are being blasted onto Steam recently. I've seen a quote from the Secrets of Raetikon developer who got pushed off the Steam home-page within minutes.

Being in the newly released section on Steam is absolutely vital to some developers and it seems Valve is utterly failing at allowing so many new releases on the same day.

Valve is well known to wanting to become an open platform without greenlight, but even before that happens there are already problems like this cropping up. Imagine if you release on a day that 18 other games get released, how would you as a developer feel? How many people are likely to scroll through pages of the newly released section on Steam, not many I bet.

This poses a problem for stores that want to be so completely open as to allow developers to release whenever they want, there needs to be some curating on this with some sort of limit per-day. Otherwise Steam will not be as profitable as it has been for indies that don't have masses of websites backing them. Hell even having an Indie section on the home-page would help separate them from games with publishers.

This does open the doors for developers to look elsewhere though, why put all your eggs into Steam? This isn't the first time developers have been unhappy with Steam and its processes, Project Zomboid also fell into a trap with the day they released into Early Access steam stopped showing Early Access titles in the 'New Releases' section.

How should Steam solve issues like these? Steam of course even with indies possibly going elsewhere wouldn't die any time soon. It is still the place where the bigger developers push their games on, so if you want them you still most of the time need to go to Steam anyway.

When Desura finally bring out their updated client for Linux, and actually have a Mac version of it then maybe more developers are likely to look at them again. They are working on it right now, so stay tuned for information on that folks. Desura still have things talked about new design to appear soon, if it isn't turning into a myth that is.

You can see the full article from where I took the info here. Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
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I am the owner of GamingOnLinux. After discovering Linux back in the days of Mandrake in 2003, I constantly came back to check on the progress of Linux until Ubuntu appeared on the scene and it helped me to really love it. You can reach me easily by emailing GamingOnLinux directly. Find me on Mastodon.
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21 comments
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tiger Apr 28, 2014
I saw that too. I got noticed of the release but couldn't find it in steam, just to see it on the second page lol
fabertawe Apr 28, 2014
I never scroll through the games banner on the store front page and always go the the Linux/SteamOS section. And as has been said already, unless a game is new on all platforms then it does not show up on the first page but is buried deep within somewhere with the date it was originally released on Windows.

As far as I'm personally concerned, a game's best chance of catching my eye is getting an article on this here very site! ;)

Oh, and while I remember, the thing that really annoys me is when the list is spammed with "Crusader Kings II: this, that, the other and a thousand more things!". I guess there's no alternative to that though.
Imants Apr 28, 2014
I see no problem I buy only games which is shown in GamingOnLinux homepage :D
GoCorinthians Apr 28, 2014
Quoting: ImantsI see no problem I buy only games which is shown in GamingOnLinux homepage :D
same here, last 5 games on my library GOL recommended it.
Anonymous Apr 28, 2014
It's annoying, even for me as a user. Especially with all the crap from 2007 coming up in spotlight.

This is a problem, and needs a solution. For developers, and gamers.
Theodis Apr 28, 2014
I think steam is moving towards having a personalized front page using the tag system. Even if there are a ton of new games it's very likely that a majority of them won't appeal to any specific user due to content or platform restrictions. Once we can specify tags for our front page like wanting to only see linux games of certain genres then the new games matching those categories will stay up much longer even if there are many new games released in general over a short period of time.
Half-Shot Apr 28, 2014
Quoting: TheodisI think steam is moving towards having a personalized front page using the tag system. Even if there are a ton of new games it's very likely that a majority of them won't appeal to any specific user due to content or platform restrictions. Once we can specify tags for our front page like wanting to only see linux games of certain genres then the new games matching those categories will stay up much longer even if there are many new games released in general over a short period of time.

That does make good sense, I would value something like that by Valve.
KingGreasy Apr 28, 2014
Valve needs to update the store interface badly. As well as the client. In the Steam store it shows at most 10 new releases in a singe column before you have to click next. Then if you click a game in a later page and hit back it starts you back at the front of the list. Compare that to Android where you have a grid of apps that extend and you scroll down. The Steam client/store is so inefficient with space and is pretty much a browser stuck in like 2005. No tabbed browsing, its slow, doesn't matter if you have a widescreen monitor, which by now pretty much standard, you get this narrow column of content that looks like an old blogger layout.

Big picture is worse with it being a single row that you can't even extend past the initial ones that are loaded.
Angry Penguin Apr 29, 2014
Well, I'm unhappy with the 1:1 Currency $:€ Ripoff on Steam, so I don't care much if it falls of the list in minutes. 9,99€ = $13.78 and 14,99€ = $20.68.
Anonymous Apr 29, 2014
I heard for all the good games from my friends.
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