WDS on Steam - A pratical guide

Wargame Design Studio is steadily building a presence on Steam. The reason is simple: Steam is one of the largest places where PC players discover, wishlist, buy, update, and talk about games. For a specialist publisher like us, that visibility matters.

This practical guide explains how WDS on Steam works, including Steam keys, direct installers, wishlists, reviews, and what changes for existing Wargame Design Studio customers.

Many of you already know our games through the WDS store, the forums, the Support Hub, or years of following the various series. Steam, however, reaches a much wider audience, including players who may never have heard of us before. Getting established there is not just about placing a title on the platform. Steam rewards visible activity: wishlists, follows, play time, and reviews.

That is where existing WDS customers can make a real difference.

If you bought a Steam-supported title directly from WDS, you should already have a Steam key waiting in your Store Account. Activating that key costs nothing, does not change your WDS store access, and does not remove your direct installer option. It simply adds the game to your Steam library and helps WDS build a stronger foothold on the platform.

The next title releasing there will be Age of Longbow Volume I, and Steam Keys for it will show up in your account prior to May 22nd.

Your WDS Store Account shows the Steam keys available for eligible titles.

Why Activate Your WDS Steam Key?

Activating your Steam key may sound like a small thing, but it helps in several ways.

First, it shows the Steam algorithm, that there is an active audience for serious historical wargames. Our games are niche by nature, and Steam visibility can be difficult to build from a standing start. The more registered owners who activate their keys, launch the games, and interact with the titles on Steam, the more presence those games have on the platform.

Second, it helps players who live primarily inside the Steam ecosystem find and follow WDS titles. Many PC gamers use Steam not only as a store, but as their main library, update manager, wishlist, review platform, and discovery tool. A stronger WDS presence there helps put our games in front of people who might never browse the WDS store directly.

Third, it gives you another installation option. Some players prefer our direct installers and manual updates, especially when they want tight control over update timing. Others like Steam's automatic update process. Activating your Steam key simply gives you the choice.

Once activated, the game appears in your Steam Library like any other Steam title.

Steam, Visibility, and Why Reviews Matter

One of the most useful things you can do after activating your key is leave an honest Steam review.

It does not need to be long or polished. A few clear sentences from someone who has actually played the game can matter far more than many people realize.

Steam users often judge unfamiliar games by review count and review rating. A title with only a handful of reviews can look invisible or unproven, even if it has a long history, a dedicated community, and years of development behind it. For established WDS customers, that can be easy to forget, because you already know the series, the designers, the scale, and the style of play. A new player browsing Steam does not.

Reviews help bridge that gap. If you enjoy a WDS title on Steam, please consider leaving a short review. Mention what kind of game it is, what kind of player it is for, and what you personally value about it. That could be the historical detail, the scale, the scenario variety, the PBEM community, the long-term support, or simply the fact that it scratches a very specific wargaming itch.

Even short, honest reviews help new players understand what kind of game they are looking at.

Reviews are especially important, but other forms of Steam engagement also help:

  • Wishlist upcoming WDS titles.
  • Follow the WDS developer/publisher page.
  • Launch and play your activated Steam titles.
  • Recommend the games to friends who use Steam.
  • Review the games you know well.

None of this is about artificial promotion. It is simply about making sure the existing WDS community is visible on the platform where many new players discover games.

Wishlisting and following are simple ways to show interest in upcoming WDS titles.

You can get to our Hub page here:

https://store.steampowered.com/curator/46113477-Wargame-Design-Studio/ 


How to Activate Your Steam Key

Activating a WDS Steam key is straightforward.

First, log in to your WDS Store Account and check your owned titles. If a Steam key is available for a game you purchased directly, it will be listed there.

Log in to your WDS Store Account and open your list of owned products.

Copy the Steam key for the eligible title.

Copy the Steam key for the title you want to activate.

Next, open Steam. In the Steam client, go to either:

Games > Activate a Product on Steam

or you click the + Button in the lower left corner and then choose Activate a Product on Steam

In the Steam client, choose "Activate a Product on Steam."

Follow the prompts, paste your key, and complete the activation process.

Paste the key into Steam's activation window and follow the prompts.


Once complete, the game will appear in your Steam Library.

The activated title will now appear in your Steam Library. Click to start the game.

From there, you can install, launch, and play the game through Steam. You can also visit the game's Steam store page and leave a review once you have spent some time with it on the platform.


Best Practices and Things to Know

Steam is convenient, but there are a few practical points worth keeping in mind, especially for players who regularly have PBEM games or long campaigns in progress.

Steam updates automatically by default

One of Steam's advantages is that it can keep your games updated automatically. For many players, that is useful. You do not need to check the Support Hub manually, download a patch, and run the installer yourself.

However, automatic updates can occasionally be inconvenient. If you are in the middle of an ongoing game, especially a PBEM match, an update may affect compatibility if both players are not using the same version. The safest approach is simple: check with your opponent before updating, finish the current turn cycle if necessary, and agree together when to move to the latest version.

Steam updates games automatically by default, though update behavior can be adjusted in the game's Properties menu.


Older versions may be available through Steam branches

If a game update causes a problem for an ongoing match, Steam may allow access to an older version of a title through its branch system if we have made that version available.

To check this, right-click the game in your Steam Library, choose Properties, and open the Betas tab. If an older WDS version is available, it will appear in the Beta Participation drop-down. Select the desired version, and Steam will switch the installation to that branch.

To return to the current version, go back to the same menu and select None.

The rollback option depends on which branches have been prepared and made available for that title. It is not a universal archive of every version ever released, so players with important PBEM matches or campaigns in progress should still be cautious before updating.



Direct installers remain useful

Activating a Steam key does not prevent you from using the WDS direct installer. Some players may still prefer to manage installations manually, especially if they want tight control over update timing.

For players with multiple ongoing games, it may even make sense to keep one installation at an older patch level for a current PBEM match and use another installation path for the latest version, as long as you are careful about folders, shortcuts, and which version you launch.

Steam activation does not replace your WDS store access or direct installer options.

A Small Step That Helps WDS Grow

Steam is not replacing the WDS store, our installers, the Support Hub, or the forums. It is an additional path, and an important one if we want to introduce serious historical wargames to a wider audience.

With Age of Longbow Volume I coming to Steam, American Revolutionary War following soon, and more titles planned down the road, this is a good moment to help us build momentum.

If you already own an eligible WDS title, please consider activating your Steam key, wishlisting upcoming releases, following WDS on Steam, and leaving a review for the games you know. For you, it may only take a few minutes. For us, and for the future visibility of these games, it can make a real difference.


10 comments


  • Rich Hamilton

    @Kenonops – For WDS games that are going to Steam you will receive a Steam Key for them in your account prior to that release, or if purchased after release up there they are naturally also included. However, you do not get the reverse. A purchase through Steam only gets you the Steam version, not the WDS version. Hope that clears things up.


  • Kenonops

    Hello WDS team,

    First of all, thank you for the clear explanation about your Steam plans. I completely understand why Steam visibility matters for a niche publisher, especially for serious historical wargames.

    I would be happy to leave honest Steam reviews for the WDS titles I own once they are available there. I only see two practical issues.

    First, will buying directly from the WDS store always include a Steam key for Steam-supported titles? Steam reviews are tied to Steam ownership, and Steam playtime only counts hours played through Steam. That means many long-time WDS players may look like complete cadets on Steam until they spend another 200 hours on the appropriate hexfield.

    Second, does buying on Steam also grant access to the offline/direct installer through the WDS store? For players like me, the offline installer is not a minor detail. It is part of the value of buying directly from WDS. If buying on Steam does not also give access to the direct installer, I will keep buying from the WDS store. But if that means I cannot review future purchases on Steam, then the visibility loop becomes weaker.

    In other words, this is a two-way bridge. One end of it needs to be solid: either WDS store purchases reliably provide Steam keys, or Steam purchases should also preserve access to the direct installer.

    One more thought: please consider GOG.com. It is not as large as Steam, of course, but I think your philosophy fits GOG much better in many ways: preservation, offline installers, classic PC audiences, long-tail catalogues, and players who care about ownership rather than just platform convenience. I suspect there is a growing audience there that would understand WDS very naturally.

    Thank you again for supporting these games for the long term. There are not many studios keeping this kind of wargaming alive, and it matters.


  • Melvin Andujar

    Thank you so much !!! I could not reinstall two games and with this guide to use the Steam key, Steam performed all of the inner stuff.
    Keep the great work !!


  • Robert Callant

    I’m a big fan of WDS/John Tiller and the First World War and Panzer Campaigns. I recently engaged an IT Guru to make my WDS library compatible with Linux, and saw this WDS on Steam blog. Exciting… I’m ready! Being already familiar with Steam Keys, when can we look forward to seeing these located in our account library? Thanks, Rob


  • George Sedlak

    New to steam, can you play this game off line?


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