STEAM
Valve Breaks Down Controller Usage Among PC Gamers
The hardest part about switching between gaming platforms is getting used to new input methods. Console players often struggle with a mouse and keyboard and PC gamers regularly wonder how anyone plays with a controller, leaving both in a state of befuddlement. Or so we thought. According to new stats from Valve, many people who play on PC have actually used some kind of controller to play Steam games.That does not really come as a surprise. Certain titles lend themselves to one another. Anything that needs to aim, navigating a bunch of menus, or complex interfaces benefits from using a mouse and keyboard. Others, like platformers and fighting games, often play better on a controller. Action games ported from consoles - looking at you, Dark Souls - practically require a gamepad.Yet the sheer number of PC gamers using controllers is still interesting to consider. Valve said in a blog post:"The first thing that jumps out in the data is that a lot of Steam players have a controller. Since 2015, over 30 million players have registered at least one controller and over 15 million of those players have registered more than one. multiple controllers and controllers that have been registered to multiple accounts, we find that a total of 60 million device-account pairs have been connected to Steam. "That's a lot of controllers. Valve said most are console gamepads that people have connected to their PCs; 45 percent are Xbox 360 controllers, 20 percent are PlayStation 4 controllers, 19 percent are Xbox One controllers, 7 percent are PlayStation 3 controllers and the remaining 8 percent fall under the "Other" category. That list is dominated by the Steam Controller, gamepads made specifically for PC, the Nintendo Switch Pro Controller, and more.Valve attributes the popularity of Xbox controllers largely to Microsoft's efforts to standardize XInput in Windows games. Many game developers have added support for XInput, which means setting up an Xbox controller is a lot easier than using one from PlayStation or Nintendo. That has not stopped a lot of people (the Pro Controller is surprisingly popular given that it's only a year old) but Xbox leads for a reason.The company's other findings are harder to attribute to anything in particular. People who connected Xbox and Nintendo controllers are far more likely to use them, for example, than people who set up a PlayStation controller. Steam Controller users also play more games than people using other types of controllers, with Valve's own gamepad being used in more than 1,000 titles. Xbox controllers sit in second with just over 600.
Those findings could be attribute to various things. Maybe they got frustrated with setting up their PlayStation controller and switched to Xbox, or maybe they just got enraptured by the new Spider-Man game on PS4 that PC games fell to the wayside. There is a chance that Steam Controller owners use the device in more games simply because, as their ownership of that controller suggests, they like giving Valve money.Valve has a different explanation: The Steam Controller's "unique combination of trackpad and gyro inputs make for better precision pointing and aiming controls than a typical thumb stick and help bridge the gap between controller and non-controller titles." This could explain why it is used so often in games with partial (or no) controller support. Either way, it's still less popular than Xbox or PlayStation controllers.But that reinforces Valve's point that a lot of Steam users rely on controllers. It would make sense for game developers to stop assuming that everyone on PC wants to use a keyboard and mouse, or even an Xbox gamepad, because in reality many other people use a large variety of input devices. It does not matter if one input method is objectively better; it does not make sense to ignore gamers with different preferences.
Nathaniel Mott
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