
Steam’s time on Chromebooks is coming to an end. What began in 2022 as an ambitious beta program to bring native PC gaming to ChromeOS will officially shut down on January 1, 2026, cutting off access to any games installed through the beta. The program let users install a limited selection of Steam titles on higher-end Chromebooks, marking one of Google’s first major pushes into native desktop-style gaming.
The feature was never meant for all Chromebooks—only models with stronger specs could handle it—and updates to the beta have slowed to a halt in recent months. As of now, Steam is still installable from the ChromeOS Launcher, but new installs come with a warning about the shutdown date and the fact that installed games will stop working after that point.
For ChromeOS gamers, the change narrows the already-limited landscape. Once the beta ends, local gaming will largely mean running Android apps or Linux programs, while bigger-budget titles will require cloud streaming via platforms like GeForce Now, Xbox Cloud Gaming, or Amazon Luna.
It’s unclear whether Google plans to revisit native Steam support in the future, but for now, the decision marks a retreat from one of ChromeOS’s boldest gaming experiments. In an era when lightweight laptops are becoming more powerful, the move may feel like a missed opportunity for Chromebook enthusiasts.

