Steam Next Fest's most-played demo is a game almost everybody hates

A girl in a school uniform pilots a giant robot
(Image credit: Amazing Seasun Games)

Steam Next Fest can be a hectic time. While some of the demos will remain after the week-long Festival of Nextival is over, many do not. You need to find time to squeeze everything in—especially if you want to get in on a multiplayer beta of strictly limited duration—even if one of the biggest games of the year happens to be launching right in the middle of it.

There are usually three Next Fests per year, in February, June, and October, and 2025's first is wrapping up at 10 am PT on March 3. Based on Steam's own ranking of the top demos, organized by daily count, we can see that multiplayer robot rumpus Mecha Break is number one and has been consistently for days. Which is interesting, given that it's currently got a rating of Mostly Negative, with only 34% of the reviews having nice things to say.

This cross between Armored Core and a hero shooter is appealing to fans of Gundams and jiggle physics, but those reviews do contain a lot of complaints about its lengthy tutorial, live-service cruft, and aggressive monetization. And yet, in spite of all the negativity, it's stayed in the number one spot while other demos have risen and fallen.

Gothic 1 Remake was in the number two spot for a while, but fell off as people gave up on its clunky movement and edgelord fantasy vibe. Right now the number two position is being held by Among Us 3D, which takes the VR version of the beloved Werewolf-like and lets players experience it flat-style. It comes with proximity voice chat built in, so you won't have to a Discord server, and the full release will have cross-compatibility with the VR version.

RoadCraft, a game of roadbuilding and logistics for the Snowrunner sickos, is sitting in third place, while Fellowship, which lets you play what are basically World of Warcraft dungeon runs without having to actually play World of Warcraft, has dropped back to fourth after spending some time in second place.

Rounding out the current top five is Haste: Broken Worlds, a third-person physics-defying sprinting game that looks like what the Sonic the Hedgehog series might have evolved into if its fans didn't keep dragging it back into 2D. Harvey Randall called it "a game about strategic falling" and said, "The trick is to make sure you come down at a good angle, and your only tools to do so are your innate sense of digital depth perception, some rough mental calculations, and a button that mercifully lets you speed up your descent in case you get either of the first two things wrong."

The rest of the list is in flux, but there's plenty more demos in there worth checking out before Next Fest finishes—most of them with much better ratings than Mecha Break. Like Shotgun Cop Man, an action-platformer about going to Hell to arrest Satan, which currently has a 100% positive rating.

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Jody Macgregor
Weekend/AU Editor

Jody's first computer was a Commodore 64, so he re having to use a code wheel to play Pool of Radiance. A former music journalist who interviewed everyone from Giorgio Moroder to Trent Reznor, Jody also co-hosted Australia's first radio show about videogames, how weird Lost Ark can get. Jody edited PC Gamer Indie from 2017 to 2018, and he eventually lived up to his promise to play every Warhammer videogame.

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