Steam's Hardware Survey Gets More In-Depth

Rob Williams

Editor-in-Chief
Staff member
Moderator
From our front-page news:
If you've ever wanted to get an idea of what video cards, processors, or Windows' versions were the most popular, there's always been one great source: Valve. Thanks to the wide usage of their Steam platform, they've been able to collect details about PCs for those who opt in, and their overall reports have been updated on a pretty regular basis. Last week, this survey saw a rather large overhaul, and the data is just as interesting as ever.

The revamped survey is in-depth, and if you want to know what system configurations are the most popular, this is the place to look. To help put things into perspective, the survey will now be updated once per month, and beside each figure will be an increased or decreased percentage number, so you can really keep on top of current trends.

The last update was completed just a few weeks ago, and some of the results are pretty interesting. Where GPUs are concerned, NVIDIA holds the vast majority, at 65.11%, with the 8800 GT proving to be the most common card. Thanks to how ATI names their GPUs, we can't get real specific. All we know is that the "HD 4800 Series" is the most popular choice from that camp.

For CPUs, Intel holds a fairly similar share as NVIDIA for the GPUs, at 63.62%. Where multi-core CPUs are concerned, we can see that 40% of the gaming market is still using a single-core chip, while Dual-Core adoption is on a steady incline. Quad-Cores are seeing slower growth, but currently sits at 10.43%. It's also not much of a surprise that Windows XP is still the leading OS, at 68.67%, but Vista 32-bit is slowly catching up, to currently sit at 23.19%.

We'll be sure to take a fresh look at this survey every so often, because it's a rather invaluable resource to see current trends. I do think there are improvements that could be made (eg: showing much higher options for both RAM and storage), but there's still no other service like this one, that I know of, so it's hard to complain.

steam_hardware_survey_121408.png

Each month, Steam collects data about what kinds of computer hardware our customers are using. The survey is incredibly helpful for us as game developers in that it ensures that we're making good decisions about what kinds of technology investments to make. Making these survey results public also allows people to compare their own current hardware setup to that of the community as a whole.


Source: Steam Hardware Survey
 

Kougar

Techgage Staff
Staff member
I am surprised by the almost 46% of users using a DX10 GPU. I am also surprised at how level the number of users using DX8 or lower is, it's a flatline 15%. There are modern DX10 GPUs for AGP that exist, so the cost of a PCIe system isn't the only holdback.

Gotta love all that detail. I have a question though, where they give the % change, what is the timeframe? From a month ago? Whenever their last survey was? 1.28% decrease in XP installs is interesting to note, but a timescale is needed...

Edit: I guess it was based on last month's data.
 
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Rob Williams

Editor-in-Chief
Staff member
Moderator
The detail is great, but what bugs me is that the hard drive storage is capped at 250GB, and the RAM is capped at 2GB. Granted, 2GB would be the most popular, but it shouldn't be tied in with the "2GB and Above" option... that doesn't tell us a thing, really. The same goes for storage. When 1TB drives are $100, their 250GB limit is a little strange.

I wonder if it's a limitation on the Steam software or something. I can't understand why that information wouldn't be there.
 

Kougar

Techgage Staff
Staff member
I don't think it is a limitation, but I'm not completely sure on that one. I'd have thought the OS would independantly know, but then again that was the problem in a nutshell with 32bit OS's so I'm not sure.

They probably didn't include it because to them the data would be useless. They will never design a game to use more than 2GB of RAM anytime soon, just about any game is going to be based on a 2GB RAM max assumption due to the 32/64bit OS issue. The cusomer market for games with >2GB of RAM using a 64bit OS is just unprofitably small and unfortunately will be for a few years more... the best I am hoping for is some games will at least be programmed to make use of >2GB if the RAM and 64bit requirements are met. I don't know of any that do this yet, though.

Same with hard drive sizes... no one is going to develop a 250GB-sized game until perhaps 10 years from now! Only experimental Blu-Ray discs not used outside a lab could go that high...

Valve has always been one of those rare game devs who's games can run on the oldest hardware around, they've built all their games to run on incredibly low-end hardware. I still hear people say they are playing TF2 on an X500 (which is nothing more than an overclocked X300) or even 9600/9800-era hardware. I remember when Valve created HDR and started using it in TLC and CS:S... I was happy my 9600XT could run detail settings maxed with HDR and was smooth, at least until multiple explosions would occur at once.
 

madstork91

The One, The Only...
I would assume that the next round up of data would show a greater % change to the DX10 cards and vista installs.

The first because well... this thursday is lumbering towards us, and is sure to make a dent.

The second simply as a bi product of the first reason coupled with the fact that XP is barely, if at all, available on new PC and laptop purchases.

Oh well. I'm still holding out for a DX11 compatible, 64 bit version of longhorn.

-You may say that I'm a dreamer...
 

Rob Williams

Editor-in-Chief
Staff member
Moderator
Kougar said:
They probably didn't include it because to them the data would be useless.

True enough, but that can be said about a lot of the information there. I don't see a reason why they can give us details like driver versions used, but not be more specific about storage and RAM. I'm going to come right out and call it stupid. 4GB has been the norm for a while, and at HIGH resolutions, having more than 2GB of RAM in your rig is going to be beneficial.

Oh well. I'm still holding out for a DX11 compatible, 64 bit version of longhorn.

What do you mean? DirectX 11 will be available for Vista and 7 when it's released.
 

Kougar

Techgage Staff
Staff member
Just an update: http://store.steampowered.com/hwsurvey/

March results now include users with >2GB of RAM, includes WIndows 7 users, and is more detailed on hard drive info. Pretty much everything we wanted! ;)

I find it amusing there are already more people using Windows 7 than Windows 2000 and Windows XP 64 combined.

Quadcore usage increased by 3.74%, XP users now stand at exactly 60% and change, its about to drop into the upper 50's!
 

Rob Williams

Editor-in-Chief
Staff member
Moderator
Ahh, glad they got some of those issues tackled. I'm not that surprised with Windows 7, although it's still quite interesting that more people use it than Windows XP 64-bit. That OS never seemed to take off for some reason. Of course, it could have been the fact that the driver support in the beginning was horrible.

If I had to guess, once Windows 7 releases, we'll see it rocket up that chart at a far more rapid pace than what we saw with Vista.
 
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