Steam, Valve’s platform for games and other digital goods, introduced bitcoin as a mean of payment in April 2016. On Wednesday, Valve announced in a blog post it would no longer support bitcoin due to its volatility and high fees.

When Steam started accepting bitcoin, the currency traded at $450 with transaction fees amounting to $0.20. After bitcoin achieved an $18,000 price tag, the fees skyrocketed to $20, a 10,000% increase.

The other issue is volatility. With the bitcoin price changing by the minute, the amount users needed to pay to purchase a game could only be guaranteed for a limited period. Since Steam needed to additionally charge the customers or refund them, they decided it was time to pull the plug on bitcoin payments. The platform ended the blog post stating: “We may re-evaluate whether Bitcoin makes sense for us and for the Steam community at a later date.”

Cryptocurrency supporters suggested Valve to support other coins that do not share bitcoin’s issues, such as Dash, Litecoin, Ethereum, and IOTA.

Roger Ver, Bitcoin.com CEO and strong Bitcoin Cash supporter, saw an opportunity in this news and invited Steam to start using BCH in a tweet.