Say for example, I fancy myself a nice Star Wars game. I don’t know exactly which one I want, but I know I don’t wanna spend over £20 on it, and I’d quite like it to be a multiplayer shooter. (In my heart I know I’ve just described the old Star Wars: Battlefront games, but stick with me for the sake of the example.)

Oh look! The old Star Wars: Battlefront 2 multiplayer shooter for £7.19, don’t mind if I do. It’s pretty useful for narrowing stuff down if you don’t quite know what you’re looking for, and there are fields to hide games you already know about and exclude stuff like VR-only games, too. There’s even an infinite scroll now so you no longer need to click through pages and pages of games you don’t care about. One of the only issues I see with it is that you can’t have a minimum and maximum price set, but I suppose that could change seeing as that’s what these experiments are all about. This search stuff is a recent graduate of Steam Labs, the part of Steam set aside to mess around with experimental features, and get community feedback on whether or not they’re actually useful. One of its other most recent ones still in development is Play Next, a feature which tells you what it thinks you should play based off of what you already own. You can learn more about the new search stuff over on the community post, or take a look at the Steam Labs home page to check out the other quite useful experiments on the go right now.

Valve have improved Steam s search with new filters - 64