FBI Seeks Steam Malware Victims After Fake Game Campaign
Original: FBI Warns Gamers About Malware Hidden in Indie Steam Games View original →
The FBI is turning a long-running Steam malware problem into a formal victim-identification effort. In a notice published on March 11, 2026, the Bureau's Seattle Division said it is seeking people who installed Steam games embedded with malware and may have been targeted between May 2024 and January 2026.
The agency listed seven titles in the current investigation:
- BlockBlasters
- Chemia
- Dashverse / DashFPS
- Lampy
- Lunara
- PirateFi
- Tokenova
Anyone who believes they or their minor dependents were affected is being asked to fill out a short FBI questionnaire. The Bureau is also asking people to encourage other possible victims to contact [email protected].
That public call matters because it turns what many players may have dismissed as isolated scam incidents into a named federal investigation. Instead of treating each suspicious listing as a separate storefront failure, the FBI is clearly framing these cases as part of a broader pattern involving malware distribution through Steam game installs.
The notice does not provide a total victim count or financial-loss estimate, but it does say victim identities will be kept confidential. The FBI also says responses may help the federal investigation, may be used to identify victims entitled to services or restitution, and could lead to follow-up contact for more information.
For PC players, the immediate takeaway is practical rather than dramatic. If any of the named games ever passed through your library, download history, or a family member's PC, this is the moment to document what happened and use the official reporting channels. The FBI's page links both the questionnaire and the Internet Crime Complaint Center at IC3.gov for suspicious or fraudulent activity.
The broader warning is uncomfortable for the PC ecosystem. Steam remains the default storefront for a huge part of the PC audience, and that trust is exactly what attackers try to borrow when they disguise malware as small game releases. The FBI notice will not solve platform safety on its own, but it does mark a higher level of scrutiny around a threat that directly targets players rather than just developers or publishers.
Related Articles
Warhammer 40,000: Space Marine 2's Chapter Voice Pack 1 DLC has received 'mostly negative' reviews on Steam, with players angry that the 450 re-recorded voicelines don't apply during mission objectives and revert to default lines — leading many to call it false advertising.
Myrient, one of the largest online video game preservation archives hosting 390TB of games, is being forced offline due to skyrocketing RAM, SSD, and hard drive costs driven by AI industry demand. The closure threatens a major resource for gaming history preservation.
A high traction r/pcgaming post shared reporting that Capcom now gets 50% of its game sales from Windows PC. The source metadata also points to further PC share growth and strong Steam performance tied to Resident Evil Requiem.