• FirmDistribution@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    According to steamdb, 113,397 games were release between 2016 and 2025.

    5863 represents 5% of those games. The percentage is significantly lower since thousands of games were released before 2016.

    Of course we can analyze more things, such as games that did very well 5 years ago, but sold practically nothing this year. We’d only need to know the titles that were released in 2025 and earned over $100,000

    • BananaTrifleViolin@piefed.world
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      3 months ago

      So 113k released between 2016 and 2025 is about 12600 a year. We have only been told that 5863 games made more than 100k last year, not what their total lifetime revenues are. Bearing in mind games generally make the most money in the first year of release (of course there there is big variation and there is a tail but mostly), then very crudely as much as 46% of new games could be making at least 100K in the first year. That’s an overestimate for many reasons but 5% is also a huge underestimate as the figure is using at all games released across 9 years and diluting the the 1 year figure we have. Also we need to bare in mind how much of the Steam library is slop and not an actual fully formed game, or is place holder entries for things like demos and even DLC.

      The real figure will sit between those two extreme limits, it’s not going to be as low as 5% but also not as high as 46%.

      • ParlimentOfDoom@piefed.zip
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        2 months ago

        Ok… Most of those are probably American made games. And even if it’s 3 devs, that’s not enough to keep most studios open, even tiny ones.

        The point was it’s not a lot.

    • Chloé 🥕@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      3 months ago

      and considering that there were over 120k games released on steam as of 2025 😵‍💫

      game development is not the goldmine some think it is, i think there’s even a stat that half the games on steam don’t ever make more than 500$

      i’d love to see a graph of the number of steam games VS the money they made. i’d guess that graph would look very exponential

      • CMLVI@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        I feel like you’d have to control for the obvious asset flips or just random, I guess, spam games thrown out on a daily basis. I don’t think it’d move the needle that much tho

        • 123@programming.dev
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          2 months ago

          Then you’d also need to remove already successful “evergreen” titles in that case, which might land you back into the same. Not a lot of money for new games.

          • CMLVI@lemmy.world
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            2 months ago

            True. Gaming landscape feels weird rn, looking at it from current standing. Tough sledding for aspiring devs. I’m also right about that age where nostalgia tends to make everything new look a bit less shiny, so I may be choosing not to see the best current offerings.

  • FirmDistribution@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    steamdb says that over 19000 games were released in 2025.

    5863/19000 represents roughly 30% of the games released on the platform.

    I honestly thought this percentage was going to be way lower. Almost 1/3 is being able to earn over 100k? This seems like a success ratio way bigger than other content creation platforms, unless my math is ignoring a key factor.

      • Starski@lemmy.zip
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        2 months ago

        How? That’s over double what I make in a year, living in America too. Are game devs required to like eat something super expensive every day?

        • ViatorOmnium@piefed.social
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          2 months ago

          Because despite all the LLM slopaganda the laws of supply and demand give software engineers some leverage over prospective employers.

          • Starski@lemmy.zip
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            2 months ago

            I see there was a fundamental misunderstanding, you see I thought you meant that 100k wasn’t enough for someone to survive on, you simply meant that Software engineers have high standards.