![]() There are some weird and wonderful things to see in PUBG, too. If you're completely new to the game however, there's no need to jump straight into the competitive stuff - you're actually more likely to be placed with bots in your first few matches. For those of you who fancy the competition, you can take part in the new nitty gritty ranked mode. Short of that, the free weekend gives you access to all of the lovely things there are to do in PUBG. PUBG Corp do note that you won't be able to make in-game purchases if you're just playing the game for free, you need to own it to be able to buy extra stuff. You can download and play it for free on Steam right now, and if you do wanna buy it that 50% discount brings its price down to a reasonable £14/$15/€15. And if you suddenly decide PUBG is the battle royale for you, you can pick it up for 50% for the duration of the free weekend. It kicked off yesterday and will run until 6pm BST on Monday the 8th of June, so there's still plenty of time left to get droppin' with the boys. Alternatively, or at the same time, we could see Tencent work toward becoming a worldwide platform.If you've ever fancied giving Playerunknown's Battlegrounds a try, now is probably the time to do it, because over the next few days it's holding a free weekend. Tencent-published game Europa, for instance, currently appears on Steam. It'll also be interesting to see if there's any reverse effect, as well: more Chinese games releasing on Steam with or without English, Russian, and other language support. If this trend continues, expect to see more games on Steam with Chinese language support-currently, there are over 4,500. ![]() SteamSpy estimates that Chinese players own far fewer games on average than American players, so it follows that a petabyte of data in China represents more individual players than a petabyte of data in the US. According to the past seven days of Steam records, The United States downloaded 58.6 petabytes worth of data, barely surpassing China's 57.2 PB. This is backed up by more of Steam's own data. SteamSpy recorded over 20 million users as 'Other' on December 8th.Īnd China has the most active userbase by far according to SteamSpy: 19.48 percent of the world's active Steam population for the past two weeks compared to the US's 14.17 percent. Yet these estimations, which are based on public user profiles, don't include users who haven't put their location in their Steam profile. SteamSpy currently has China in second place for user count, with 11.34 percent of the world's Steam users, while the US accounts for 14.67 percent. Additionally, the data comes from users who logged in and agreed to the survey during November, and Steam doesn't offer the survey demographics, only the results.īut if China doesn't have the largest share of users, it's at least close. The Hardware Survey includes Chinese-speakers outside of China, of course, and Chinese is by far the most-known language in the world. (Image credit: SteamSpy)ĭespite the results of recent Steam Hardware Surveys, China isn't necessarily home to the most Steam users of any country, at least not yet. ![]() ![]() In SteamSpy's graph above, the active Chinese audience on Steam overtakes the US's over the past two weeks. ![]()
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