If you’ve been in the PC gaming hobby for a while, when Steam sales come along you might be so full up on games you’re not interested in buying new ones. But it’s a great time to score DLC for your existing games on the cheap.
When DLC (Downloadable Content) first comes out for games, it’s usually fairly expensive. Even when it isn’t particularly pricy by itself when you’re buying this DLC and that DLC it all adds up pretty quickly.
But after a game has been out for a spell and when there is a big sale afoot on Steam, you’ll easily find piles of DLC at deep discounts.
So even if you’re not in the market to pick up a new game it’s a great time to add some content to the games in your library you’re currently enjoying or would like to get back into.
There are two ways to go about finding DLC for games you own. The first way, using Steam natively, is to simply look up the game you want to check the DLC for on the website. If you know specifically which game you want to expand with DLC, that’s easy. Pop the name, like Cities: Skylines in the search box and marvel at how many DLCs there are.
Unfortunately Steam doesn’t make it easy to see all the available DLCs across all your games in one central place. On the front page, it will highlight a few DLC at a time, as seen below, but there’s no option to browse a giant master list of all the DLC available for games you own.
Notice there’s a “See all games on your wishlist” button but no “See all DLC games for your games” button, which is a shame. Who wouldn’t click it?
Fortunately, third-party tools come to the rescue. If you head over to Steamdb.info you can link your Steam account and Steamdb.info will, when the DLC filter is applied, show you all the available DLC for your
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