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Steam on Linux Surpasses 5% Market Share in the Latest Survey Update

What might not be surprising is that a large portion of those 5.33% Linux installations run on Valve’s customized SteamOS operating system. With a 24.48% share, the use of SteamOS grew by 0.65% last month alone, while other Linux distributions also contributed significantly. Other Windows alternatives like macOS are gaining momentum as well, with Apple seeing a 1.19% month-over-month increase to 2.35%. Although Linux now holds more than twice the market share of macOS, its growth within the Steam install base is a significant change, nearly doubling in just a month. Perhaps these alternative operating systems are now attracting enough attention from big game studios to encourage them to release native ports instead of relying on translation tools like Wine/Proton.

Interestingly, the Windows family of operating systems still holds a large majority at 92.33%. However, this is a 4.28% reduction from February, indicating that many users have become frustrated enough with Microsoft’s updates and functional issues to consider alternatives. An interesting case is Windows 7, which now holds 0.08% of Windows OS installations but saw a 0.03% increase in market share among Windows OSes. Windows 11 experienced a massive increase of 10.57%, pushing its share to 66.85%. This growth has come at the expense of Windows 10, which lost 14.89% and now holds 25.36%. Since the change is not simply a uniform upgrade from Windows 10 to Windows 11, it suggests that a significant number of gamers have switched to Linux and, surprisingly, macOS for their basic gaming needs.










