Valve appears to be working on a new feature for Steam that will let you mark individual games as «private,» which will let you keep your profile public while preventing all your friends from knowing just how much time you spend playing Horny Housewives Booty Call Blackmail. (Or, you know, whatever.)
Currently, the privacy options on Steam are limited: You can set your profile, or individual parts of it (game details, friends list, and inventory), to public, friends only, or private. That provides some control over what the rest of the Steam universe can know about you, but it's an all-or-nothing solution that lacks flexibility.
The addition of a per-game privacy option, spotted and shared on Twitter by SteamDB creator Pavel Djundik, promises to go a long way toward addressing that shortcoming. Steam users will be able to mark individual games as «private,» which will keep other Steam users—even their friends—from seeing it.
Let's be honest with each other here: It's not hard to put together why Steam users would want this feature. Yes, you might want to keep quiet the fact that you've poured 2,960 hours into Destiny 2: That's the kind of commitment that might give concern to friends and health care professionals, after all.
But I would suspect that Valve's embrace of hardcore sex games is likely a larger factor. It's great to have the freedom to indulge as you like (as long as you're of appropriate age, of course) but it's not necessarily something you want advertised to the world at large—or even your online gaming pals.
In my case, for instance, I sometimes recall that I have a game called Boobs Battleground in my Steam library and think, yeah, maybe I should do something about that. I don't mind bringing it up here
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