Steam Charts on June 29: Why Older Hits Keep Beating New Releases
Steam charts are useful less as a quality ranking and more as a map of audience habits.
On Steam, novelty alone rarely beats a repeatable reason to return.
Steam charts on June 29 show a familiar pattern again: the top is held by service giants, while new releases compete not only with each other but with the habit of returning to Counter-Strike 2, Dota 2, PUBG: BATTLEGROUNDS and other long-running games.

Why Older Games Hold the Top
The key factor is not age, but habit density. CS2, Dota 2 and PUBG have social groups, competitive rhythm, item economies, tournaments and clear reasons to return every day.
That means chart position is not always a quality ranking. More often it reflects the strength of a repeatable loop: quick match, clear goal, friends online and a reason to come back.
Where New Releases Have a Chance
New projects such as SAND: Raiders of Sophie get an attention window during launch or a major update. After that, they must prove that interest is not carried by novelty alone.
This is why early patches often matter more than marketing. Players can forgive rough edges when they see fast fixes and a clear roadmap.
The Takeaway
For players, charts are useful as a live-audience signal, not a pure quality list. For developers, they are a reminder that retention is built around a repeatable scenario players want to relive.