Here's another installment in my "unannounced coming soon to Steam crap" series:
- Alien Breed 2: Assault
- Alien Breed 3: Descent
- Americas Army: Special Forces ("Special Forces" is the name of America's Army 2. I'm guessing this will be available alongside the already-on-Steam America's Army 3.)
-
Archon Classic (remake of the classic old
chess-inspired fantasy strategy game)
- Commander: Conquest of the Americas - Unknown DLC
- Dungeon Siege III
- GTR - FIA GT Racing Game
-
Hacker Evolution (similar to Uplink)
-
Hacker Evolution: Untold
- Lead & Gold: Gangs of the Wild West - Unknown DLC
-
Lugaru HD (this is the predecessor to the upcoming
Overgrowth, which is also coming to Steam)
- MX vs ATV Reflex (this came out on consoles last December, and now it's coming to PC. The PC version hasn't been announced yet, period, so this is exclusive info, right here.)
-
Quarrel
- Serious Sam Classic: The First Encounter (the "Serious Sam HD" remakes are both already available on Steam, and now the untouched original editions will soon be available as well, giving players a choice of versions. There are still some great mods for the original vesions, for instance, so there is a good reason to have both versions.)
- Serious Sam Classic: The Second Encounter
- Steel Fury: Kharkov 1942
-
The Polynomial (this is an incredibly gorgeous shooter that takes particle effects to an insane extreme. I've been playing the free demo version for over a year, and I'm looking forward to buying the full game on Steam)
- X: Beyond The Frontier (this is the original game in
the X series of space flight and trading sims. All of the other games in this series are on Steam, so I guess they decided it was finally time to complete the collection with the game that started it all.)
- X-tension (this is the expansion pack to X:BTF)
- You Are Empty
-
Zen Bound 2
A couple other notes:
Broken Sword: Shadow of the Templars - Director's Cut will soon become a Steamplay title.
And perhaps the most significant bit of news in this whole post: It looks like Valve's years-old dream of
allowing users to use Steam to keep their video-card drivers up-to-date is finally starting to come true. Gabe has always cited users having outdated drivers as one of the biggest customer support problems, and the idea that Steam users could allow Steam itself to manage their driver updates automatically (just like game updates) was one of the original ideas behind Steam, when it was being dreamt up nearly a decade ago. So, after years since we last heard about the subject (specifically, the 2007 story linked above), Steam should very soon be launching an option that will allow AMD/ATI Radeon owners to allow Steam to always keep their graphics card drivers fully up-to-date (sorry, Nvidia owners, nothing for you yet). It will, of course, be optional.