Steam Sees 7 Million-Seller Meccha Chameleon as AI-Generated Game Churn Floods Store
Updated
Updated · PC Gamer · Jun 22
Steam Sees 7 Million-Seller Meccha Chameleon as AI-Generated Game Churn Floods Store
2 articles · Updated · PC Gamer · Jun 22
Summary
Steam’s new-release pages are increasingly clogged with low-effort, AI-generated games and capsule art, making it harder for users to spot promising indie titles beneath the platform’s algorithmic front page.
AI-made capsule images often signal a mismatch between polished-looking key art and crude in-game screenshots, eroding what store art once conveyed about a game’s quality, style and intent.
That churn is spreading across releases from different developers, with the report arguing the images function less as marketing than as generic filler that discourages deeper browsing.
Steam’s top sellers still show breakout hits cutting through the noise: $6 multiplayer game Meccha Chameleon sold 7 million copies after launching on June 10 and ranked No. 2 by revenue for June 9-16.
The broader concern is discoverability—without a reliable way to filter AI-generated slop, smaller standout games risk being buried among asset flips and simulator spam.