Analysis updated 2026-06-26
Report a bug or crash you encountered while running the Steam client on Linux
Search existing issues to find a known problem and see if a workaround has been posted
Check which Linux system library version Steam will require after August 2025 to plan for distribution upgrades
Determine whether a Steam-related issue belongs in this tracker or in a game-specific Valve repository
| valvesoftware/steam-for-linux | gomods/athens | coder-world04/complete-system-design | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stars | 4,754 | 4,754 | 4,755 |
| Language | — | Go | — |
| Setup difficulty | easy | moderate | easy |
| Complexity | 1/5 | 4/5 | 1/5 |
| Audience | general | ops devops | developer |
Figures from each repo's GitHub metadata at analysis time.
This repository is Valve's public issue tracker for the Steam gaming client on Linux. It is not source code for the Steam application itself. Rather, it is a place where Linux users can report bugs, crashes, and problems they encounter while running Steam on their systems. The README describes system requirements for running Steam on Linux: a 64-bit Ubuntu installation (current or LTS release), a compatible CPU, at least 512 MB of RAM, and around 5 GB of disk space. Starting in August 2025, a newer version of a core Linux system library (glibc 2.31 or newer) will be required, which means some older Linux distributions will stop being supported. Installation on Ubuntu is straightforward: download a .deb installer package, then either double-click it or install via the command line. The client works with the regular Steam game library, and Linux-specific games can be found through the Store's Linux tab. For reporting issues, the README directs users to search the existing issue list before opening a new report. Different Valve games have their own separate issue trackers: Source-based games, GoldSrc games, Portal 2, CS:GO, and Proton (which allows Windows games to run on Linux) each have their own GitHub repositories for bug reports. When filing a bug, users are asked to include a description, steps to reproduce, system information exported from inside the Steam client, and any crash logs. The repository also includes basic conduct guidelines for people participating in issue discussions, asking for patience since not every issue gets an immediate response.
Valve's public bug tracker for the Steam gaming client on Linux, not Steam's source code, but the place where Linux users report crashes, bugs, and compatibility problems they encounter running Steam.
Setup difficulty is rated easy, with roughly 5min to a first successful run.
Mainly general.
This repo across BitVibe Labs
Verify against the repo before relying on details.