Like the thousands upon thousands of games it hosts, Steam has secrets.
[This post originally ran on March 30, 2015. Update 18/9/2015: Added more features. Updated again on 1/3/2018: Added EVEN MORE features.]
Steam is more feature-rich than just about any other gaming platform on the planet. However, as it’s expanded over the years, it’s become this cacophonous conglomerate of bells and whistles, many of which are buried under other bells and whistles. It’s hard to know everything Steam is capable of. Here are some lesser-known Steam features I’ve come across in my travels:
- You can use the search bar on your friends list to find more than just people. If you search a game’s name, it will pull up people playing that game, making it easier for you to jump in with them.
- You can customise the Steam store frontpage. Mouse over the big “featured and recommended” box at the top of the page, and you’ll seen a tiny arrow in the upper-right corner. Click it and select “preferences.” This will allow you to enable or disable certain types of content from appearing on the front page, including violent and/or sexual games. You can even filter out games (or entire genres) based on tags.
- You see which nicknames people have used in the past. Go into their profiles and click the arrow next to their name, and you’ll get a full list of them. That’s right, Tupac and famed children’s fantasy author Brian Jacques. I know who you really are, and I know that you play Borderlands 2 together every Tuesday, and you call it Borderlands Tuesday, because of course you do.
- You can see when friends changed their names. Use this URL: http://steamcommunity.com/id/[insert user name here, no brackets]/namehistory
- You can look at all sorts of fun info about your graphics card, including exactly how much dedicated video memory it has. Open up Steam Big Picture Mode, then go to settings. From there, select “system.”
- You can access the dev console. Find your Steam icon and right click it. Go to properties and add “-dev” and “-console” to the text in the field titled “target.” That will add a “Console” tab to the top of Steam alongside things like Steam, Library, Community, and whatnot. It opens a command-line-based developer’s console. Here are a bunch of commands you can use in dev consoles, some with Steam itself, and some in Source games (Half-Life 2, etc).
- You can keep tabs on your favourite game servers. Select the “view” option in Steam’s upper-left corner, and then click on “servers.” This will give you access to a list of every server connected to Steam. From there, you can see servers you’ve played on in the past, which ones your friends are on, and other useful information.
- You can change your download region to up your download speed. By default, Steam downloads games from the closest available server, but sometimes, that server is slammed. If it feels like games are getting piped to your PC in slow motion, open the settings menu, select “downloads,” and then change the region to another nearby city. Sometimes it makes a huge difference. The same menu also allows you to enable and disable downloads while you’re playing games, so it’s just generally useful.
- You can install or delete games in batches. Tired of installing or deleting games one by one? Do it in bulk. Simply go into your game library, CTRL-click a batch of games to highlight them, and right-click one of them. After that, it’s as simple as picking the install (or uninstall) option.
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You can organise your game list according to size. Want to free up hard drive space quickly and easily? Sort your games so the biggest are at the top, so you know which to delete first. OK, there are a few steps to this one. First, switch your Steam library to list view, the library mode only used by psychopaths.
Then click the + button on the upper right portion of the screen and, at the bottom of the drop-down menu, you’ll see an option for “size on disk.” That will add another column to your library that shows how much space games take up and which hard drive they’re on. Just click that to sort by biggest-to-smallest or smallest-to-biggest.You can change the default page that Steam displays when you open it.
- You don’t always have to see The Latest Deals when you boot up Steam. Tired of being tempted by low, low prices? You can tell Steam to default to your library, the news feed, the Steam community, or a handful of other pages by opening the settings menu, selecting the “interface” tab, and choosing a new “favourite window.”
Bonus features, as suggested by readers
- You can hide games in your library, to cut down on clutter and/or shame. Right click a game’s title, go to “set categories,” and check the box marked “hide this game in my library.” (Thanks, Aaronc53.)
- You can give your friends nicknames on your friends list. Just click the triangle next to their name on your friends list and select “add nickname.” (Thanks, BarreDeFaire.)
- You can make your screenshots not suck. Just select “settings” from the “Steam” drop-down menu in the top left corner, hit the “in-game” tab, and choose “save an uncompressed copy” under screenshots. Goodbye, blurry grossness. (Thanks, Rathorial.)
- You can save your favourite servers from various games. If you want to access them quickly, just select the “view” drop-down menu near the top left corner followed by “servers.” (Thanks, ZexMaxwell.)
- You can open Steam store pages in new windows. Just click your mouse wheel on the link you want to access and — praise the gods of basic goddamn multitasking — a new window will appear. THANK GOODNESS. (Thanks, piccolo113.)
So there are some lesser known Steam features you might find handy. Are there any others you can think of? Let me know and I’ll add them to the list.
Comments
15 responses to “16 Steam Features You Probably Don’t Know About”
How do I turn off auto updates for ALL my library at once
At the top left, Select Steam > Settings > Downloads
Set a download restriction to a time your computer isn’t on AND/OR set a bandwidth limit.
I don’t want that though, I want to just disable all my games auto downloading and then enable a select few.
If that’s the case, you may need to right click on every single game, select properties, updates tab, and change automatic updates to “Only update this application when I launch it”.
Exactly my point people have been asking for a quick way to do it to multiple games for the last 10 years.
This feature is hidden behind a closed beta access, and I’m not even sure if you can still gain access to the feature, but I seem to still have it.
It was a big deal when the new consoles were still coming out and had both stated they would have game activation to stop send hand resale of games, but would allow you to share the games you buy with up to 5/10/cant remember friends/family.
Steam released a beta you had to be invited to around that time called ‘Family Sharing Beta’, which I got into.
Now I can (and have done many times) log into my account on a friends computer and authorize their computer and add them to my ‘family’. Then when they login, at the bottom of their library they see a new section called ‘Coltzer’s Library’ and can play all 600+ games I own. The only catch is if I start playing any game from my library, they get 5 minutes to save and quit (or buy the game).
Genius idea and would be great if they rolled it out more widely.
It’s not in Beta anymore. Has been the case for ages. 😛
Handy feature:
Sign into Steam on multiple devices with the same username. If your second device doesn’t have a game installed but your primary one does, you’ll see the option to “stream” it to the second device. This won’t work over WAN, so get your crappy old laptop, hook it up to your 70″ LED in the lounge room and play Borderlands on the couch with your best mate and a carton of beer.
Knew about all of these but the big picture thing. I never use big picture
Yeah same, these are pathetic hints. You’d have to be a really newbie to steam to not know these. Like the customize store one for instance, that update was heaps recent, everyone should have known about that.
What a judgemental person you are.
You would honestly have to use steam as passively as possible not to know them.
What you know does not = how smart you are. Its how you use what you know that determines that.
To call someone a noob because they don’t know something is fair, as the word implies they don’t know how to do something anyway. However, to call these tips pathetic is pretty stupid. There were handy to know and can help people out a lot.
The only pathetic ones really are to do with game servers, as the number of games going to matchmaking is horrid, but it is becoming the standed as it is cheaper… so yay for that. :s
Steam user for years and own near 300 games and most of these features I didn’t know of. Because I use it to buy games and play games, not fiddle with settings and socialise.
Adding a nickname is very handy and I use it all the time. E.g when you get a random add, I add the nickname “Random Add”. When it turns out they are a scammer, I know straight away.
Also handy for friends who change their nick and avatar all the damn time!
If you are signed in on your PC and log in with steam mobile, you can tell steam to down load games from the mobile version