It would take you 90 straight days to play each of Steam Next Fest's demos for just 30 minutes

A player shoots an assault rifle at a mech in Empulse, with the Steam Next Fest logo laid on top.
(Image credit: Valve, 1047 Games)

Today marks the beginning of Steam Next Fest, the thrice-yearly, week-long smorgasbord of delectable demos served up by game creators of all sizes as samplers for their in-development delights. And unsurprisingly, as the Steam catalog adds tens of thousands of games every year, that translates into a lot of demos.

To be precise: This season's Next Fest is, at time of writing, featuring 4,347 demos. And that number will increase throughout the week.

(Image credit: Codex Interactive)

That's already a big number, sure, but the scale of the available selection becomes a lot clearer—and more staggering—when you put it in terms of playtime. Let's say you wanted to conduct a thorough survey of Steam's immediate future by giving each Next Fest demo a half-hour of your time. An admirable undertaking! And one that would demand at least three months.

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Spending 30 minutes with the 4,347 demos on the current slate would take you 2,173 and a half hours, or roughly 90.6 days. And that's without breaks for food, sleep, biological necessities, or even the time it would take to switch from one game to another. If you started today, many of those games would be released by the time you finished as part of this fall's frantic glut of pre-GTA game launches.

Still, you'd get to enjoy plenty of variety along the way: As is ever the case, Next Fest has something for everyone. If you've spent years hoping for another Titanfall, you could try Empulse, an FPS with spiritually similar wall-running and mech-dropping. Maybe an isometric spaceship extraction shooter about building a starbase in the aftermath of cosmic horror is more your speed. If so, Omen has a demo open.

(Image credit: Nick Nieuwoudt, Dominik Latos)

Or you might just want to shoot a very, very big cannon. In that case, let me point you at the steam-driven hydraulics and hand-calculated firing solutions of Iron Nest: Heavy Turret Simulator.

As explored above, that's just scratching the surface of the playable previews available this week. We'll be writing up our favorite Next Fest demos across the site, so keep checking back for our thoughts on games that you might have overlooked. Your wishlist can never be too full.

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Lincoln Carpenter
News Writer

Lincoln has been writing about games for 12 years—unless you include the essays about procedural storytelling in Dwarf Fortress he convinced his college professors to accept. Leveraging the brainworms from a youth spent in World of Warcraft to write for sites like Waypoint, Polygon, and Fanbyte, Lincoln spent three years freelancing for PC Gamer before joining on as a full-time News Writer in 2024, bringing an expertise in Caves of Qud bird diplomacy, getting sons killed in Crusader Kings, and hitting dinosaurs with hammers in Monster Hunter.

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