
My Steamworks Dashboard, Rebuilt: A Whole Studio in Your Pocket
We rebuilt [My Steamworks Dashboard](/products/my-steam-worksdashboard-app) from the ground up. 🎮 In the first version, all you could do was add an API key and see your sales. The new version is a different product entirely — a whole studio in your pocket, built by game developers, for game developers.
What is My Steamworks Dashboard?
My Steamworks Dashboard is a mobile app that puts the health of a game on Steam into your hand. Instead of opening a browser, logging into a partner portal, and clicking through reports, you get the numbers that matter — how many people are playing, where the trend is heading, and what just changed — as a live feed on your phone.
Think of it as a control room for a game's life on Steam. It pulls public Steam data and, for your own titles, your Steamworks figures, then turns them into something you can glance at over coffee or react to the second a number moves. It's the difference between checking a spreadsheet once a week and feeling the pulse of your game every day.
The problem it solves
Running a game on Steam means living across a dozen tabs. Concurrent players sit in one place, your sales in another, the competitor you're watching in a third, and the wishlist numbers somewhere else again. By the time you've assembled the picture, the moment has passed — a streamer spike came and went, a sale drove a player surge you didn't see, a competitor launched the same week you did.
Developers don't lack data; they lack a single, live view of it. My Steamworks Dashboard exists to collapse all of that into one screen you actually keep in your pocket — so the question stops being "let me go pull the numbers" and becomes "I already know."
How player tracking works
The heart of the app is concurrent players — how many people are in a game right now. That single number is the closest thing to a heartbeat a game has:
- A spike usually means a launch, a sale, an update, a streamer, or a viral
moment — something you want to ride while it's hot.
- A steady climb means word of mouth is working and momentum is building.
- A drop is an early warning — a bug, a bad patch, churn after a sale ends —
that's far cheaper to catch in hours than in weeks.
My Steamworks Dashboard tracks that number continuously and plots it across 24-hour, 7-day, and 30-day windows, alongside all-time peaks, so a single reading becomes a trend you can actually read. You stop guessing whether today is good and start seeing where you sit against your own history.
What's new in the rebuild
- 🆓 Free plan. Follow games, track live players, and set alerts — no payment
required. The core dashboard is now open to every developer.
- 👤 Accounts. Your data is no longer tied to one device. Secure sign-in keeps
everything synced everywhere.
- 🔍 Discover. Browse and filter the entire Steam catalog and follow any game
in a single tap — track competitors and the whole market, not just your own titles.
- 📊 Player analytics. Live concurrent players with 24h / 7d / 30d trends and
all-time peaks.
- 🔔 Real-time alerts. Push notifications for spikes, drops, and new peaks —
never miss a moment that matters.
- ✨ Refreshed design and a brand-new app icon.
Who it's for
- Indie developers watching their own launch in real time, who can't afford
to miss the window when a game finally catches.
- Studios keeping an eye on a whole portfolio and the competitors around it.
- Producers and marketers who need to know the moment a campaign or sale
moves the needle — not in next week's report.
- Anyone curious about the market — analysts, streamers, and players who want
to see what's actually being played, not just what's being promoted.
If you ship on Steam, or you're thinking about it, this is the dashboard you wish the platform gave you by default.
Free vs Premium
The new free plan covers the essentials — following games, live player tracking, and alerts — with no payment and no API key required. Premium unlocks wishlist and financial analytics, advanced reports, and unlimited tracking, with a 7-day free trial. The idea is simple: every developer should be able to watch the market for free, and the people running a business on Steam get the deeper commercial picture when they need it.
Why we rebuilt it
The first version answered one question — "how are my sales doing?" But a studio needs more than a sales readout: it needs to watch the market, track momentum in real time, and react the moment something moves. So we rebuilt the app around live signals rather than static reports — and made the core free, so any developer can start in seconds.
The best analytics tool isn't the one with the most charts — it's the one that
tells you the moment something changes.
Built by game developers, for game developers
My Steamworks Dashboard is an Internative product, built by a team that ships games as well as software — so it's shaped by the questions developers actually ask. It's the same product thinking we bring to client work through our Serious Games and App Factory studios.
Try it
See the app, follow your first game free, and turn Premium on whenever you want with a 7-day trial. Building something of your own and want a team that ships? Talk to us.