Baldur’s Gate 3 Players Log 17 Million Hours On Steam Deck

Baldur's Gate 3 Players Log 17 Million Hours On Steam Deck



Key Takeaways

  • Baldur’s Gate 3 is one mighty popular game, having launched to critical and commercial acclaim en route to several GOTY awards.
  • That said, it is still shocking to find out just how popular the title really is.
  • As revealed on Twitter, over 17 million hours alone were played on the Steam Deck, making Baldur’s Gate 3 quite the battery drainer.

There’s no denying that Baldur’s Gate 3 is one popular game. The CRPG from Larian Studios quickly rose above all other games to win several Game of the Year awards, to go along with critical acclaim and fanfare.

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Larian’s masterpiece is going to stick around for a very long time.

And while it is always impressive to learn just how many people bought a game or how much money a particular title generated, the more interesting stats usually relate to the choices players make. Such is the case with Baldur’s Gate 3, when a developer revealed the sheer number of hours put into the game on the Steam Deck alone.

Your Battery Is Mine

In a tweet shared on Monday, Larian’s Michael Douse, who served as the publishing director for Baldur’s Gate 3, revealed that over 17 million hours of the game were played on Steam Deck. More specifically, 17,223,529 hours on Valve’s breakout handheld alone.

For those keeping track at home, that many hours is equal to 717,647 days. That many days is the equivalent of 1,965 years, or just about how long it feels waiting for Grand Theft Auto 6. (We’re kidding.)

Douse jokingly added that Larian should collaborate with someone to release a 100w battery. “A little bag of holding, you know, for ur juice,” he remarked. Depending on which Steam Deck model you own, either OLED or LCD, that battery could last anywhere between 2–8 hours or 3–12 hours. In other words, that 100w battery would certainly have come in handy around launch.

Thankfully, Valve is already beginning to brainstorm what a Steam Deck 2 will look like. It still seems far off, but hopefully it’ll be around for whatever Larian is cooking next. It certainly sounds like we’ll need it.

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