Steam has just rolled out a visual refresh to its game storefront pages, designed to look better on high-resolution monitors and modern setups. The most noticeable change is that individual game pages and hub sections have been expanded in width—from around 940 pixels wide to approximately 1,200 pixels—giving images, trailers and descriptions more room to breathe.
Alongside the wider layout, new viewing modes have arrived: trailers and screenshots now support a “theatre mode” for immersive viewing, as well as an optional fullscreen toggle. Developers also benefit from improved formatting tools in the “About the Game” section, making it easier to present feature lists, art, videos and gameplay details in a visually appealing way.
The update isn’t limited to game pages alone. Store hubs, tag listings, bundle-detail screens and Steam Charts all share the wider format, creating a more consistent global layout across the store. Steam’s design team says the changes were validated on smaller devices too and confirm the pages will scale down cleanly for tablets, Steam Decks or narrower browser windows.
For users this means a cleaner, more modern store experience—especially if you’re gaming on a 27-inch or ultrawide monitor where the old layout felt too cramped. For developers, the extra space means their visual assets and messages can shine with less compromise.
That said, the update may be more immediately visible to desktop users; mobile and very narrow-window experiences remain adaptable but may not feel quite as dramatic.
In short: Steam hasn’t changed the core shopping experience, but by widening its layout and upgrading media display features, it’s made its store feel more contemporary—and better suited for today’s screens.

















