First spotted by Valve-focused Twitter account wickedplayer494, it looks like a playtester for the unannounced Valve shooter Deadlock has made the game visible on SteamDB via the site's token dumper feature, allowing anyone to see Deadlock's player count, update history, and other details.
Valve has still neither confirmed nor denied the veracity of the numerous alleged Deadlock leaks we've seen over the past week. Having been through the NieR Automata Secret Church Saga, I'm not clearing them as 100% legit until the big V weighs in, but the sheer quality and quantity of videos and details from multiple sources all corroborating each other makes it hard to believe Deadlock is some kind of elaborate hoax.
And I really don't know how anyone could have faked this SteamDB entry. The site's token dumper allows players of restricted games that SteamDB's tools cannot pull from—usually delisted, unreleased, or otherwise made private—to confer that access to the site. SteamDB can then publicly display the data of a private game (such as a closed beta) just like it does with any other app on Steam.
The update history for one of Deadlock's packages, "Project 8 — Staging for Beta Testing" dates all the way back to 2020, and the parent Deadlock package on SteamDB has 186 concurrent players at the time of writing. For this to be fake, someone would have had to take a private Steam app that's been in existence in some form for four years, arrange for nearly 200 real or automated users to access it at the same time, and then dump its token.
Aside from concurrents, update history, and the Project 8 code name, we can see that there are currently both Windows and Linux builds of Deadlock—that makes sense with Valve's Linux-based SteamOS, though I also wouldn't have been surprised if the dev had just gone all in on Proton compatibility instead. One Deadlock depot looks like it contains tutorial information, with the file name «getting_started_movement_zipline» dovetailing with the
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