Valve has been on a roll lately when it comes to improving the Steam experience. Over the past month, several leaks and datamined findings have pointed to a number of quality-of-life features in the works, and two of them stand out in particular. According to SigaTbh on SteamDB, lines of code found inside the Steam client point to Valve planning to add a 30-day price history to game pages on the platform.
The feature would show users how a game’s price has changed over the past month, including any sales or discounts that took place during that period. For anyone who has ever wondered whether a game just went on sale or whether a better deal might have happened recently, this would be a handy tool to have right on the store page. Up until now, players who wanted that kind of information had to turn to third-party sites like SteamDB to track price changes.

This price history feature is not the only quality-of-life improvement Valve has been working on. In a our previous report, a dataminer known as “Roadrunner” uncovered hidden code inside SteamDB pointing to a tool called the Framerate Estimator. That feature would let users enter their PC specs directly on a game’s store page, and Steam would then pull real performance data from other users with similar hardware to give a general idea of what framerates to expect.
Valve refers to it as an “Estimator” in the code, making clear the results are based on user data from comparable setups rather than guaranteed numbers.




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