Steam’s new chat client is out of beta testing and fully live for everyone.
The new and vastly improved Steam chat client that Valve rolled into beta testing in June, with support for group chats, multiple channels, voice chat support, and inline multimedia, is now fully operational and live for everyone.
The new Steam chat is a big step forward, not least because it looks and acts like Discord, the current king of the game-centric chat client ring. Persistent group chats are « built for gaming, » as players can see which of their regular cohorts are online, invite them to a voice channel, and then fire out some game invites. There’s also a web-based option, so if you can’t (or don’t want to) fire up Steam, you can still participate in your communities through your browser.
The release version of the Steam chat client boasts a number of changes and fixes since the beta, and Valve said that it will pave the way to future Steam updates.
« Friends and chat are just the beginning. This update was built using a new UI framework and includes some important architectural improvements under the hood, all of which allow us to make more frequent updates to our web-based Steam components, » it wrote. « There are many improvements to the overall Steam experience that we plan to tackle, and your feedback helps us to prioritize what’s next. »