The Steam game provider platform will no longer support devices with the Windows 7, Windows 8 or Windows 8.1 operating system starting January 1, 2024. As reported by Endgadget on Wednesday, the latest feature of the game provider platform for personal computers has been using an embedded version of the Google Chrome browser which has stopped support. for the operating system in February.
source : steam
The upcoming new Steam version for Windows will also require an operating system update which is only available as a minimum Windows 10. Players can only log in if the device they are using is an updated version of Windows such as Windows 10 or above. This was confirmed by Valve through its statement that it would cut off the Steam service in early 2024.
The change was announced by the company in the latest Steam beta update. The beta has warned players running Windows 7, 8, or 8.1 to switch or upgrade to a newer version. The warning will also arrive soon in the regular Steam client as well.
source : eraspace
Based on data from Valve, only a small proportion of its service users run applications on Windows 7, 8 and 8.1 devices. There are 1.86 percent of the Steam user base on the three operating systems. While the majority of Windows users, who account for 96.37 percent of the total active accounts on the platform, have used Windows 10 reaching 62.33 percent and Windows 11 of 32.06 percent.
source : how to geek
Perhaps out of convenience or anxiety for certain sources of trouble in the future, there are not a few PC gamers out there who have decided not to update their operating systems. Along with aging, those who are still sticking with Windows 7 and Windows 8 have to start "chewing" the bitter pill because the cessation of support for popular software from various directions. The bad news? If you are a PC gamer who is in this situation and rely on Steam as your mainstay gaming platform, you are likely to run out of options.
Operating systems like Windows 7, also called Valve, have not been supported by Microsoft itself since 2020, which of course makes your PC vulnerable to malware and other kinds of exploits. How about you? How many of you are still using Windows 7 or Windows 8?