For some time now, the annual summaries that put us in figures about what we have consumed have become popular in many music and streaming services: our favorite titles, the ones we have spent the most hours on, the artists we listen to the most and the genres that fill our musical minutes on a daily basis. So it was not surprising that this Forward custom made the leap to video game stores, with Valve and Steam at the forefront.
What can you see on Steam Replay?
It has been those of Gabe Newell who have officially announced this new function of the store that is launched to summarize in figures and graphics what our particular 2022 has been . With a video that you can see just above and that draws on the typical humor made in Valve, they wanted to show us everything we can know about ourselves in terms of game statistics. And the truth is that you are going to know small details that you were not fully aware of.
For example, which games are the ones you’ve spent the most time on , the genres, the achievements with a small timeline that says a lot about whether you’ve enjoyed it straight away or in leaps and bounds several weeks away. As is logical, you will be able to put into numbers all the time you have dedicated to enjoying something within Steam, as well as the number of launches to which you have spent a single minute of play.
It is, of course, a new way of looking at your statistics and being aware if everything you have spent has been recovered later, really enjoying and getting the most out of Vampire Survivors , God of War , PUBG , CS:GO or any other of the thousands and thousands of developments that live within the most important digital store for PCs.

How can you check Steam Replay?
This new Steam function will be available by default on the main page of the store. You only have to do a small scroll to the bottom of the home page that opens by default to see the banner that occupies the entire width with that 2022 Replay. Needless to say, you have to click to start loading the small presentation detailing some relevant data such as:
- Most played title by total percentage of time spent and sessions.
- The full number of pitches you’ve used throughout the year.
- The number of trophies and the number of games to which they have belonged.
- The games you’ve spent the most time playing in specific categories, such as those made for streaming .
- Your record of games played in fewer days. That is, for example, 12 in ten days.
- Percentage and number of games that are new of all the ones you have played in 2022.
- Percentage and number of classic games that are more than eight years old on Steam that you have launched from the app.
- Chart of most enjoyed genres.
- Breakdown of each of the games you’ve tried , with timelines to check how much you’ve invested in them within each month.
If with all of the above it is not clear to you how your year on Steam has been… what else do you need?
