Back when the feature first launched, Steam curation was supposed to be a guiding light through winding caverns of crap. Flash forward a few years, though, and curators are less relevant than ever. With a new update, Valve hopes to change that.
Sometime in the next few weeks, Valve is planning to overhaul Steam curator functionality for curators, regular Steam users, and developers. First and foremost, that means making curation more flexible. Soon, curators will be able to embed videos (madness! itâll never catch on), make lists of games theyâve reviewed organized by theme (âtop ten anime porn gamesâ or what have you), and customize their pages.
Curators are also getting a rather interesting bit of functionality that seems kinda at-odds with the idea of being an impartial third party.
âWe all know that graphs solve everything, so yes, weâre adding more of them,â wrote Valve in a blog post. âIn particular, Curators will be able to see how their reviews impacted their followerâs behavior in the Steam store.â
That seems extremely open to abuse, given that curators are unregulated, and influential ones couldâknowledge of exactly what their followers are doing in handâeasily cut deals with game makers to push traffic in their pageâs direction. I guess weâll see!
If youâre a regular Steam user, youâll soon see curator recommendations appearing in more places. Right now theyâve got their own dedicated widget on the front page, but before long theyâll also appear at the top of tag and genre pages. Valve is also improving its ârecommended curatorsâ system (FINALLY) in hopes that players will actually be able to find new curators worth following. Previously, if you were a top curator from the systemâs early days, you were set. If not, you had virtually no chance of anybody finding your curation page and, therefore, no reason to consistently curate games.
Lastly, for developers, Valve is implementing a system called Curator Connect thatâll allow them to search for curators and give them Steam keys without having to go outside Steam and risk getting scammed by impersonators.
These changes seem sensible (except, maybe, for the graph one, which seems awfully questionable), but it remains to be seen whether or not people will actually rely on Steam curators and seek out new ones. The feature has languished for so long that I donât imagine people are just gonna flock back to it now that itâs a little different.
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