Huge OS and RAM usage swings in Steam Survey likely to have been influenced by China influx

Feb 2025 Steam Hardware Survey Results
(Image credit: Tom's Hardware)

Although the Steam Hardware Survey is never a 100% accurate representation of all Steam users around the globe, it often shows the trends in PC systems, with the January 2025 Steam Hardware Survey results showing users migrating to Windows 11 and GPUs with 8GB of VRAM. However, the latest Steam Hardware Survey for February 2025 seems particularly skewed and features a massive jump in user numbers picking Simplified Chinese as their primary language. We've seen this kind of thing happen before, and it was caused by an internal error that made Steam query cybercafe PCs multiple times, but this might not be the case this time.

The latest survey showed a massive 20.88% increase in Chinese-speaking users, with the language claiming the top spot and putting English in second place at 23.79%. This means that 50.06% of Steam users surveyed prefer Chinese as the language on Steam, which is quite a surprising development. Not because Chinese has become the top language on the gaming platform, but because it happened so suddenly.

China is one of the most populous countries on Earth, so it makes sense to have many people prefer Chinese as their language on the PC. Steam has been available in China since 2021, so we would have expected this jump to happen nearer then, not today. Furthermore, gaming in China is heavily regulated by the government; that’s why users there have a localized version of the platform called Steam China.

However, it seems that the latest Steam Hardware Survey results combined the numbers from both the international and China-only Steam clients. This is the most plausible explanation for this sudden jump in Chinese speakers on the platform, especially as Taiwan and Hong Kong use Traditional Chinese, which only accounts for 1.1% of Steam users.

Massive swings in OS version usage, RAM quotas

Likely because of the sudden influx of Chinese users, we also see some massive swings in other hardware trends. For one, Windows 10 gained a massive 10.47% jump in user numbers despite Windows 11 slowly becoming more popular in the rest of the world as the former is nearing its end-of-life date. Another big change that we noticed is the massive increase in systems with 32GB of RAM, with 46.94% of users packing larger memory. Just last month, 45.07% of surveyed systems only had 16GB of RAM, so this change is also likely brought about by the sudden influx of new systems from China (unless millions of people just had the sudden urge to upgrade the RAM on their systems).

Aside from that, we also saw a large shift in primary display resolutions, with 1440p displays getting a bump of 9.92%, with 29.98% of surveyed users sporting this resolution. 1080p Full HD screens are still the most popular, at 52.34%, but it seems that more gamers are gravitating towards higher resolutions. This is likely driven by the increase in popularity of GPUs with 8GB and 12GB of VRAM, with both increasing by 7.41% and 4.88%, respectively.

If these massive changes were brought about by users from China, then it seems that gamers from that country are quite serious about their hardware. The popularity of 32GB of RAM, 8 to 12GB of VRAM, and 1440p resolution suggests that this is the sweet spot for most gamers when it comes to their PC specs.

Alternatively, this fluke could have been caused by erroneous reporting data again, similar to what happened to the survey way back in 2018 (linked in the intro). Unfortunately, there's no way for us to track the accuracy of this report, especially as Valve is mum about its survey methodology and doesn't reveal how it got all this data.

TOPICS
Jowi Morales
Contributing Writer

Jowi Morales is a tech enthusiast with years of experience working in the industry. He’s been writing with several tech publications since 2021, where he’s been interested in tech hardware and consumer electronics.

Read more
AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D
AMD CPUs, 64GB RAM, and Windows 11 show strong gains in the latest Steam Hardware Survey
Moore Threads
Chinese-made gaming GPUs get up to 120% FPS boost — new drivers and stability fixes for MTT S80 and S70 cards
Ryzen Threadripper CPU
AMD chips now comprise 55 percent of Puget Systems orders — AMD makes big inroads in professional systems
MSI GPU
Nvidia's shortages are limiting PC GPU market growth, looming tariffs also impacting sales
Nvidia Hopper H100 die shot
Nvidia's defeatured H20 GPUs sell surprisingly well in China — 50% increase every quarter in sanctions-compliant GPUs for Chinese AI customers
Nvidia
More than 251 million GPUs shipped in 2024, according to new research
Latest in Gaming PCs
Tech Deals
Save $400 on the new Nvidia RTX 5080-powered Alienware Area-51 Gaming Desktop
Feb 2025 Steam Hardware Survey Results
Huge OS and RAM usage swings in Steam Survey likely to have been influenced by China influx
Tech Deals
This budget 1440p gaming PC is only $899 at Best Buy — the MSI Codex Z2 packs an RTX 4060 Ti and AMD Ryzen CPU
Asus ROG NUC 2025
ROG NUC offers powerful performance in a smaller package than a PlayStation 5 — Asus pairs the RTX 5080 laptop GPU with a Core Ultra 9 mobile CPU
Holiday Deals
Get gaming with ABS' Kaze Ruby gaming PC powered by a powerful Nvidia RTX 4080 Super GPU - Save $500 on Newegg's After Christmas Sale
Corsair Vengeance i7600
Corsair Vengeance i7600 review: Premium performance
Latest in News
Despite external similarities, the RTX 3090 is not at all the same hardware as the RTX 4090 — even if you lap the GPU and apply AD102 branding.
GPU scam resells RTX 3090 as a 4090 — complete with a fake 'AD102' label on a lapped GPU
Inspur
US expands China trade blacklist, closes susidiary loopholes
WireView Pro 90 degrees
Thermal Grizzly's WireView Pro GPU power measuring utility gets a 90-degree adapter revision
Qualcomm
Qualcomm launches global antitrust campaign against Arm — accuses Arm of restricting access to technology
Nvidia Ada Lovelace and GeForce RTX 40-Series
Analyst claims Nvidia's gaming GPUs could use Intel Foundry's 18A node in the future
Core Ultra 200S CPU
An Arrow Lake refresh may still be in the cards with only K and KF models, claims leaker
  • ekio
    I am surprised that adding China in the stats decreases Linux share.

    I thought they were betting on Linux with UOS and Kylin to stop having such a strong dependency on American technology.

    They should start the transition asap imho, because relying on Windows is a big weakness.
    Reply
  • TerryLaze
    ekio said:
    I am surprised that adding China in the stats decreases Linux share.

    I thought they were betting on Linux with UOS and Kylin to stop having such a strong dependency on American technology.
    That's what the government does but how many in the government play games on steam?!
    Reply
  • nookoool
    ekio said:
    I am surprised that adding China in the stats decreases Linux share.

    I thought they were betting on Linux with UOS and Kylin to stop having such a strong dependency on American technology.

    They should start the transition asap imho, because relying on Windows is a big weakness.

    Steam has good linux compability but that may be not the case for the the other game store. I run Linux as my main daily but keep a gaming pc with Windows. Even as a Linux user, there are some critical apps that just runs fully/natively on windows.

    Chinese Linux ecosystem is a bit weird. I tried Deepin a few years back and it had an ancient kernel. These days its in weird constantly changing / unstable state. I don't even believe wechat client is available natively on Linux and tencent also decided to remove the webclient.
    Reply