A bump of 7% of (Steam) players in May.

drsoontm
drsoontm Member Posts: 4,954

It has been about 9 months since the last time there was a significant rise in players.

Comments

  • ShinobuSK
    ShinobuSK Member Posts: 5,279

    They announced some good changes, if that wouldnt bring players back, then Idk what would

  • KateDunson
    KateDunson Member Posts: 714

    Some people have hope in what the devs announced at anniversary, also double bloodpoints event for an entire week, soon the new chapter as well.

    They didnt announce any change to sbmm tho, matters of time till it will go down again

  • StarLost
    StarLost Member Posts: 8,076

    Shrug. I find it interesting.

    Not because of the 'OMG sky is falling DbD is dying' stuff, but because I'm curious as to whether the game has peaked.

  • KateMain86
    KateMain86 Member Posts: 2,374

    We care because we want to see DBD in a good place and continue to be online for the foreseeable future. Rising player numbers on steam is a good thing as it shows a returning interest and possible appeal to new players on that platform. This is also why everyone should be doing those surveys they mentioned. The more feedback they get the better they can make changes to the game to make the players happy and attract more people to it.

  • Shaped
    Shaped Member Posts: 5,996

    You guys don't understand. This still means dbd will die soon, think about it. More players playing the game means more people pissed and more people quit. This is a huge blow to bhvr. /s

  • KateMain86
    KateMain86 Member Posts: 2,374

    You do have a point. I'm curious as to how much of the Steam player base makes up the overall DBD player base. I'm not sure where to look to see data on player numbers for other platforms so I don't know if the same trend is happening on console too. Seeing rising numbers on even one though I think is a good thing. And yea I do think it may be because of the anniversary event coming up and also the reveal of the new RE chapter. That is sure to bring back a lot of players if even for awhile.

  • KateMain86
    KateMain86 Member Posts: 2,374

    I imagine if Steam is showing a rise in numbers then other platforms are too. People tell their friends about DBD all the time. Their friends may try it out on console and then start playing together. Word can get out there all sorts of ways. When I play other games and talk about DBD there are lots of people who have never even heard of it before. I had never heard of DBD before until my friends started playing it again and I watched them play it for awhile before I started playing.

  • anarchy753
    anarchy753 Member Posts: 4,212
    edited June 2022

    Hang around here long enough and you'll be brainwashed by the "no form of data you find anywhere can be used to draw conclusions" PR talk too.

  • dugman
    dugman Member Posts: 9,714

    That’s because for the most part MMR works fine, they already did a big change to it, and they already announced prior to the anniversary chat that they were working on likely further refining it so MMR would go up or down based on how survivors escape as a team versus how they escape individually (that way someone who sacrifices themselves to help the rest of the survivors escape doesn’t have their MMR go down in the process.)

  • DBD78
    DBD78 Member Posts: 3,629

    On the other hand a game losing players makes them think and make needed changes. They had a game so long not doing much right and still having lot's of players. I don't want them to get back to old ways by not having to worry about players.

  • dugman
    dugman Member Posts: 9,714

    I agree with you that Steam Charts is probably roughly proportional to the overall playerbase. To play Devil’s Advocate, though, hypothetically of Steam and PC gaming as a whole were losing significant market share to console gaming then the weight of Steam players in the overall numbers would be less and less significant over time. Also if the game were to make technical changes that only impacted PC players but console players were unaffected or vice versa that could result in contrary shifts where Steam Charts goes the opposite direction of the overall DbD population.

    Like you said, though, I see no evidence or reason though to think Steam Charts aren’t generally reflective of the overall playerbase.

  • GoshJosh
    GoshJosh Member Posts: 4,992
    edited June 2022

    Don't mean to be a Debbie Downer, but there were login rewards and a double BP week. This was the last double BP event since.. when? Years?

  • Viskod
    Viskod Member Posts: 854

    Haha the release of Evil Dead caused DBDs numbers to go up. Hilarious.

  • drsoontm
    drsoontm Member Posts: 4,954

    Maybe some have tried and decided this wasn't so bad after all ...

  • Mr_K
    Mr_K Member Posts: 10,540
    edited June 2022

    That's just inflation.