Steam week in review: Another online shooter winds down weeks after launch, as robot cowboys take over

A party of robot cowboys brandish their guns in Far Far West.
(Image credit: Fireshine Games)

It's been a rough year for new multiplayer games but then, the same was true in 2025. By now it's taken for granted that a long in-development project released by major publishers is not guaranteed success. Not only that, what hits is wildly unpredictable—exemplified by the likes of Peak and Phasmophobia—and success rarely corresponds with the development budget involved.

This week's case in point: Far Far West. It's an early access cooperative shooter taking cues from Left 4 Dead and Vermintide, and while it doesn't have a yee-haw button people seem to love it. (It probably helps that it has a singleplayer component as well.)

Article continues below

In a rare and welcome move, Night Street Games wants to keep the game playable even if major updates aren't likely. "Our focus will shift to replayability, community support, and empowering our players to write the next chapter of Last Flag with persistent lobbies and unique game rules inspired by some of the games we love like GoldenEye, Team Fortress 2, and Super Smash Bros. We don’t want to kill our game—we want to give it to the community who helped us get here."

Top Steam games by revenue (April 21 - 28)

Steam releases its top sellers charts on Wednesdays, so it's too early to see how Far Far West and the new HoMM did across their full launch weeks. The April 21-28 period below is, well, pretty much as you'd expect:

Swipe to scroll horizontally

Rank

Game

1

Counter-Strike 2

2

Windrose

3

Steam Deck

4

Pragmata

5

Marvel Rivals

6

Vampire Crawlers

7

Crimson Desert

8

Overwatch

9

Forza Horizon 6

10

Apex Legends

Aside from Far Far West and the new HoMM game there were a few other big first week hits: Game With Your Friends is a testament to the ongoing relevance of friendslop, while Invincible Vs—a 3v3 2.5D fighter—is also doing decently.

Notable for its absence in the rolling revenue list is s&box, the new game creation platform from the creators of Garry's Mod and Rust. It made $1 million on launch day according to Facepunch Studios, but I am a touch surprised it hasn't done better than a zany four-player shooter by an unknown studio. Morgan Park has some interesting thoughts on how the landscape has changed since the heady days of GMod.

Last week's Steam deep cuts

A character stands in front of an ice cream van on a sandy beach in the game Before Fate

(Image credit: Cotton Game)
Sledding Game | May 1

Sledding Game | May 1

An early access downhill sledding game that adopts the happy-go-lucky lo-fi look of other modern casual multiplayer games likes Peak and RV There Yet. It's a race to reach the bottom first, but watch out because oppoents can sled into you, throwing you wildly off course thanks to some comedically over-amped physics.

Forbidden Solitaire| May 1

Forbidden Solitaire | May 1

Creepypasta and everyone' favourite Windows 95 pack-in, together at last. Forbidden Solitaire is about browsing the dubious contents of a 1995 CD-ROM game. Yes, there's actual solitaire, but there's also hectic almost-FMV graphics and cutscenes that look like the last thing you see before you die at the hands of the murderous guy who squats the nearby Blockbuster ruin.

Scooterflow | April 30

Scooterflow | April 30

A freestyle scooter sim for folk who have always wanted that. It may look like Tony Hawk but it's a far sight more complicated, and the physics are designed to fairly perfectly simulate what it's like to ride these things. Also, the skateparks are modelled 1:1 on actual, real life locales.

Ecto | April 29

Ecto | April 29

Here's a cool first-person 3D platformer about bunnyhoppin' around in nonsensical landscapes. The point is the collect enough "star fragments" to proceed to the next level, but you might as well take your time because there's a lot to interact with in this freebie.

Best Steam user review of the week

Does what it says on the tin. Also you can Tokyo Drift a piglet. - Gargaj on Adorable Adventures

Shaun Prescott
Australian Editor

Shaun Prescott is the Australian editor of PC Gamer. With over ten years experience covering the games industry, his work has appeared on GamesRadar+, TechRadar, The Guardian, PLAY Magazine, the Sydney Morning Herald, and more. Specific interests include indie games, obscure Metroidvanias, speedrunning, experimental games and FPSs. He thinks Lulu by Metallica and Lou Reed is an all-time classic that will receive its due critical reappraisal one day.

You must confirm your public display name before commenting

Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name.