
A datamine points to SteamGPT, an internal Valve AI, to speed up support and combat cheating on Steam and CS2.
Following a datamined Steam update, references to a feature called SteamGPT have emerged, suggesting that Valve is testing an internal AI for Steam.
The files indicate two practical uses: accelerating user support workflows and assisting with Trust Score and anti-cheat systems in titles like Counter-Strike 2. With tens of millions of daily active users, even modest improvements could impact the speed of problem resolution and cheat detection.
Steam has approximately 69 million daily active users, according to the datamine information.
Valve has not confirmed details, but the material suggests a look behind the scenes at what the company might be testing.
What the datamine points to
- The idea of an AI to process and accelerate support services appears
- It may be linked to the Trust Score system and anti-cheat methods in CS2
- The implementation would be internal, not a public-facing experience
Impacts on gaming and support
Although automation can bring gains in agility, there are concerns regarding the quality of support when provided by AI and potential flaws in the process.
Regarding the anti-cheat, the idea is that the AI will assist in detecting cheaters in popular titles like CS2, but it remains to be seen how this will play out in practice.
In summary, without official confirmation, everything boils down to speculation about SteamGPT and its role behind the scenes at Valve.
What is your take on SteamGPT? Do you see automation as a solution for support and fair play, or do you fear impacts on privacy and the player experience? Leave your opinion in the comments.
Veja mais artigos como SteamGPT: Valve may be testing internal AI for Steam and anti-cheat na categoria News.






