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The latest Steam Hardware Survey reports that just 0.11 percent of gamers still run Steam on Windows XP 32 bit. Windows Vista has so little use that it isn’t even noted.
Bad news for owners of dedicated retro rigs: Steam is dropping support for Windows XP and Vista on January 1, 2019, Valve announced this week. And the deadline isn’t just for feature updates.
The number of Windows 8 users on Steam is now more than the number of Windows XP user, according to the newly updated Steam hardware survey report for Feburary 2013.
Windows XP and Vista users will be able to launch games through Steam until the end of the year, but other functionality will be less certain. The new Steam Chat client , for instance, won't be ...
For the remainder of 2018 Steam will continue to run and to launch games on Windows XP and Windows Vista, but other functionality in Steam will be somewhat limited. For example, new features such ...
Steam will apparently stop working on Windows XP and Vista starting on January 1, 2019. Valve has recommended that users upgrade to Windows 7 or above in order to receive further updates.
The latest Steam client beta update includes a note that the developers have "fixed a crash-on-startup compatibility issue with Windows XP SP3." Yes, Windows XP Service Pack 3, the last major ...
The most recent Steam hardware and software survey, published in May 2018, revealed that 0.22% of Steam users have it installed on a Windows XP machine. Granted, it's not even a quarter of 1%, but ...