More Steam users have made the switch to Windows 11 in the past month. Just a few weeks before the death of Windows 10. You have to respect it; that's years of holding out for improvements to the new OS before finally taking the plunge.
The , and in it [[link]] we can see that the share of users on Windows 11 has increased by 2.65%. Windows 11 is run by 63.04% of those surveyed, up from 60.39% last month.
It's more likely we're just seeing the imperfect methods of the Steam Hardware Survey. The survey is far from a perfect representation of the userbase of Valve's platform—it's more akin to "guidelines" than actual data, to loosely quote Captain Barbossa from Pirates of the Caribbean. Still, it's a good idea of what the general trends among users are.
MacOS, God bless it, is up by 0.14%, which is actually a larger increase than Linux. Is that down to the latest Apple chips , or just another statistical anomaly? Since you're reading this on PC Gamer, I'm going to be tribal and go with the latter. Don't even try to talk to me about gaming on a MacBook.
Overall, Linux has 2.68% share of Steam users, while MacOS has 1.91%. Windows still makes [[link]] up the largest margin overall at 95.40%.
Next month's Steam Hardware Survey will be the most interesting, as later this month, Microsoft will cease support () for Windows 10. Now, there are ways to extend support for another year, including just signing up for new security updates in your Settings, but it's likely we'll see more users make the leap to Windows 11 as the walls start closing in on Windows 10.
Users might have been holding off from upgrading to Windows 11 for a variety of reasons. For starters, it comes with even more Microsoft nonsense that I can totally appreciate isn't for everyone. There's also the issue of system requirements that are more stringent that anything seen for Windows 10, requiring a CPU that has support for a TPM. That's most modern processors going back a number of years, but it still could be a limiting factor for the remaining minority of users that haven't upgraded yet.
If you're in that camp, you can still install Windows 11 using a tool such as Rufus, to entirely bypass Microsoft's requirements. Just note that it does reserve the right to cease updates or limit features, though we haven't seen much of that yet. With some games now requiring added security such as Secure Boot for their anti-cheat measures, it might be an issue down the road, but at that point, perhaps it really is time for an upgrade. Though, like I mentioned before, you can always stick with Windows 10 for at least one more year and receive critical security updates.

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