Steam may have its own AI chatbot like ChatGPT
Valve is likely developing its own artificial intelligence bot, SteamGPT, which will provide technical support to players and help ban cheaters.
Valve is likely developing its own artificial intelligence bot, SteamGPT, which will provide technical support to players and help ban cheaters.
Valve is likely developing its own artificial intelligence bot, SteamGPT, which will provide technical support to players and help ban cheaters.
This is reported by Tom’s Hardware, citing insider Gabe Follower, who found the name SteamGPT in Steam service files. The files indicate the connection of SteamGPT with the user’s profile, account creation date, reliability indicators, model ratings and trust rating.
The code snippets found suggest that SteamGPT will have access to virtually all of an account’s statistics and will control whether it can be banned. The «Trust Rating» is part of Valve’s Trust Factor system, which helps Valve monitor and combat cheaters. It records a Steam account’s rating (including in-game bans), phone number binding, Steam Guard usage, and in-game behavior, including ruining the experience of other players.
It seems that Valve is working on a «SteamGPT» feature that will apparently deal with Steam support issues and is somehow connected to Trust Score and CS2 anti-cheat? pic.twitter.com/a3MckicQf2
— Gabe Follower (@gabefollower) April 7, 2026
Code was also discovered that indicates that SteamGPT can control or access the anti-cheat system and database of Counter-Strike 2. The code found in the files indicates that SteamGPT can track player actions and their rating in the anti-cheat system.
It’s not yet known when Valve will announce SteamGPT or whether it will be released at all. The AI assistant project could just be a concept that Valve is testing. However, if it does appear, it would be the first artificial intelligence tool from Valve, which is in no hurry to join the AI mania that has swept across tech companies.



