This Steam user just got an achievement for owning 40,000 games, and that's the least wild part - You'd need to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars to get anywhere near SonixLegend's Steam game collection

  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
1.webp

Owning too many games that you never play is practically a meme on Steam, but one user might blow everyone else out of the water judging by the number of games they own. SonixLegend is a Steam user from China who has the distinction of owning 40,000 games, for which they earned a "Game Collector" badge on the platform on September 23, 2025. They are the only person on Steam to have this achievement, and it took them 15 years to get there.

Steam offers badges that users can display on their public Steam profiles, and there's a set tied to the number of games you own. You can get a badge for owning a single game, but the tiers go up progressively all the way up to 40,000. There's no higher tier currently, which makes sense when you consider that in 2024 alone, Steam added a little under 19,000 games. Owning games is almost a game onto its own, as evidenced by the game collection leaderboard that SonixLegend now tops. To crack into the top 100 of this leaderboard, you need to own at least 19,000 games. Top ten? You gotta have at least 33,000 titles. Good luck!

What makes this achievement particularly impressive is that SonixLegend seems to have run right past it. They reached 40,000 within the last 24 hours ... except as of this writing, there's 40,029 games in their account. Perhaps they're gunning for the addition of badges for 45,000? Whatever the case, it would take SonixLegend at least seven years of non-stop playtime to get through their entire collection, assuming they take the most economical path to get there. In terms of current value, the games add up to $644,904. But their actual account is somehow only worth $250,041 according to SteamDB. Another startling detail to consider here: SonixLegend technically owns over 97,000 titles in their account, but over half of them are shovelware that Valve will not count toward your badge total.

2.webp

You'd think that, at this level, the person involved might not even be gaming much at all. But no, SonixLegends is legit. Their favorite game is Alien Swarm, the free-to-play co-op survival game made by Valve designers hired from the modding community on the platform. SonixLegends has put 551 hours into Alien Swarm, and they've nabbed every achievement in the 2010 game. Actually, SonixLegend has completed at least 34 games "perfectly," which Steam designates as any titles where you manage to get every single achievement.

But with this many games on the line, there's no way for SonixLegends to cover all their bases. Sure enough, the value of their unplayed games adds up to $241,524. That's multiple years' worth of salaries thrown into the ether, AKA Gabe Newell's wallet. The most expensive thing they own is 3DF Zephyr Lite Steam Edition, a 3D modeling application that retails at $249.99. Otherwise, every other game in their top 20 most expensive titles all cost $199.99. Some of these items are barely functional at all.

One of the 199.99 games, Hexaluga, has a "mostly negative" review consensus on Steam, hailing from users who say the game is unfinished. "Selling this game is fraud," one review reads. "As an attorney in real life, I do not use the term fraud flippantly. There is no game here, and you should not pay for it." But when you're trying to get the 40,000 game collector badge, you can't be selective about what games get you over the finish line. "Got this as a throw-in with a G2A purchase and I still feel scammed," reads a review for Mine Royale, another $199.99 game in SonixLegend's collection.

Out of their entire collection, SonixLegends has only written reviews for 20 games. They're a fan of Black Myth: Wukong, but as far as SonixLegends is concerned, you should not play Coronavirus Attack. "A rubbish game made by rubbish," SonixLegends wrote.

Now, how long do you think it takes SonixLegends to decide what to boot up when they log into Steam?

Article Link

Archive
 
The funny thing is that the public number of games he has doesn't match the actual games he has purchased. Steam does not count games that barely have any reviews or purchases towards the achievements associated with the number of games you own.
 
Isn't this that autistic chinese guy who just buys games for the sake of buying them despite his computer being a pile of shit that Josh showcased on stream on new years or christmas last year
 
Isn't this that autistic chinese guy who just buys games for the sake of buying them despite his computer being a pile of shit that Josh showcased on stream on new years or christmas last year
Do you have a link for the stream? I’m not surprised in the slightest.
 
I find it fascinating to build such a piece of a persons identity around the purchase of digital goods like this. If dude had a little basement warehouse of 40,000 game boxes that might be a little cool, but when its a digital good you can't even really showcase it in a meaningful way, nor is the possession unique - I could throw a thousand bucks into large disk drives and pirate 40k titles in a couple months and have basically the same thing without spending anything else.
 
Isn't this that autistic chinese guy who just buys games for the sake of buying them despite his computer being a pile of shit that Josh showcased on stream on new years or christmas last year
I doubt it, I thought that guy was from a poorer family which is why he has a shit computer, I'm betting this is the autistic child of some CCP official.
 
This isn't as hard (or expensive) as it sounds. There's free scripts available to automatically add the many thousands of free titles on Steam to your account. You'd be surprised how much free stuff is just sitting there (not always demos either -- sometimes it's full titles).

All of those "what's your Steam account worth?" gimmick sites tally up the full price retail price of everything on your account to generate their total. They have no idea whether you got something on sale or for free.
 
This isn't as hard (or expensive) as it sounds. There's free scripts available to automatically add the many thousands of free titles on Steam to your account. You'd be surprised how much free stuff is just sitting there (not always demos either -- sometimes it's full titles).

With maybe 100 exceptions total, free titles don't increase your official total games count and aren't counted for the library size badges.

You're right about expense, though. If you wait for sales and buy bundles, $100 can shake out to several hundred games.
 
Last edited:
With maybe 100 exceptions total, free titles don't increase your official total games count and aren't counted for the library size badges.
Oh weird, I didn't know they actually made that distinction. I figured "an entry is an entry." Neat.
 
Back
Top Bottom