Steam.tv is live again — say hello to Valve’s Twitch competitor? – CNET

steam-controller

The Steam Controller. Unrelated to this announcement, but it’s a nice visual way to represent Valve’s gaming initatives, yeah?

Valve

Steam.tv is back online — just in time to let gamers watch Dota 2 tournament The International while chatting with their friends over Steam.

We got an early look at the new Steam game broadcasting platform last week, when Valve accidentally pushed it live.

Last Friday afternoon, we saw a smattering of reports that PC gaming giant Valve had registered the domain name Steam.tv, speculating that Valve would soon launch a service designed to compete with Amazon’s popular game-streaming website Twitch.tv. Since, you know, esports are kind of a big deal these days, with millions upon millions of dollars on the line, and Valve’s own Dota 2 game is the focus of one of the biggest esports events of the year, one which just so happens to kick off next week.

So you can imagine our surprise when we found that Steam.tv actually went live on Friday, and we got one of the only first looks on the internet. 

vCard QR Code

vCard.red is a free platform for creating a mobile-friendly digital business cards. You can easily create a vCard and generate a QR code for it, allowing others to scan and save your contact details instantly.

The platform allows you to display contact information, social media links, services, and products all in one shareable link. Optional features include appointment scheduling, WhatsApp-based storefronts, media galleries, and custom design options.

Here’s what we discovered then:

Screenshot by Sean Hollister/CNET

Valve pulled it down late Friday, telling CNET it was pushed live by mistake, but what we saw was fairly limited anyhow: the Steam.tv website was only showing off The International, which is the giant Dota 2 tournament I was referring to earlier — so it wasn’t exactly allowing any ol’ Steam gamer to livestream their gameplay sessions quite yet. 

Here’s what it looks like when you log in with your Steam account. 

Screenshot by Sean Hollister/CNET

But we could already see that the interface is vastly advanced compared to Steam’s existing Steam Broadcasting website. It feels far more like a native web app. 

Once I logged in, I was able to access my new Steam Chat friends list and group chats — the interface seems very similar to steamcommunity.com/chat, but with more functionality — and invite friends to watch videos together while we chat. (hey there, @seaniccus!) The interface has room for quite a few tabs up top for additional chat windows, but weirdly, the video gets minimized when you invite friends. You have to then expand it again.

Screenshot by Sean Hollister/CNET

Oh, and there’s built-in voice chat right there in your web browser, at least in Google Chrome. While the Steam.tv interface works in Firefox and Microsoft Edge, voice chat isn’t supported in those browsers yet — and I haven’t actually been able to log into the chat interface with those browsers as of Monday.

steam-tv-browser-limitations

steam-tv-browser-limitations

Screenshot by Sean Buckley/CNET

I also downloaded the latest Steam Beta Update on desktop to see if it unlocked any new functionality, but it doesn’t seem to support Steam.tv videos — not only could I not watch The International from the desktop app, but when I started broadcasting a session of Into the Breach, and my buddy tried to watch me play via Steam.tv, it kicked him to the old Steam Broadcasting webpage instead.

A Valve representative told CNET that Steam.tv went live by accident and was meant to be an internal test: “We are working on updating Steam Broadcasting for the Main Event of The International, Dota 2’s annual tournament. What people saw was a test feed that was inadvertently made public,” said the company on Friday.

So far, Steam.tv looks like it could be a neat place to hang out with friends while watching games, but it’s not clear from that statement if it’ll be an alternative to Amazon’s Twitch, Microsoft’s Mixer and Google’s YouTube Gaming.quite yet. 

Update, 10:05 p.m. PT: Added statement from Valve that Steam.tv went live by accident.

Update, Aug. 20 at 2:17 p.m. PT: Added that Steam.tv is live once more.


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