Destiny 2: Renegades is out now, and as part of that launch, Bungie has debuted a new cinematic trailer for players to check out, but what players are also likely checking out is the game’s concurrent player count on Steam. Now, it needs to be said that concurrent player counts on Steam are not everything; they are not the full picture for any multiplatform game, they are not an indication of sales, and they are not the best measuring stick for the health of multiplatform multiplayer games.
All that said, Steam is, almost undoubtedly, the largest digital storefront and platform for PC players, and the concurrent player counts for multiplayer games on Steam are not exactly a data point that should be easily cast aside.
So, how are Destiny 2’s concurrent player numbers now that Renegades is live for all players? Better than they have been since August 2025, and slowly growing to be even better.
At the time of this writing, per SteamDB, there are 66,207 players currently playing Destiny 2 on Steam. That’s miles better than the all-time lows recorded in October, and the recent lows of a little more than 1k players recorded just days before the launch. But it is still not better than the launch day for Edge of Fate, Destiny 2’s last major expansion release.
When Edge of Fate released, Destiny 2 peaked at 108,535 players on launch day. Of course, the day isn’t done yet, and Renegades could prove to beat Edge of Fate’s record, though falling short would be the latest sign pointing towards how Destiny 2 has fallen off in the eyes of players. And even if Renegades is able to beat the concurrent player count for Edge of Fate, that doesn’t make the expansion an all-out success, since even Edge of Fate was a commercial miss for Bungie.
Bungie is fully aware of the fact that players don’t hold Destiny 2 in the same regard as they used to. According to a recent interview, it hopes that Renegades will be the start of a better future for the game, while acknowledging where it stumbled following the release of The Final Shape. Still, rumors persist that Bungie is working on Destiny 3, which would potentially give the studio the blank slate it needs to try to get players back into the decade-spanning shooter.
But since Destiny 3, if it happens, won’t arrive for a while, in the meantime, we’ll see how Bungie does when it tries to brute force a commercial success with the backing of Star Wars for its latest major expansion.
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