In a big blog post reflecting on the life of Steam in 2018, Valve detailed some new features planned for the go-to PC gaming client in 2019. Below all the numbers and pie charts explaining growth and infrastructure changes and lessons learned, Valve finally puts a release window on a long-awaited library update built on the same technology introduced with the recent Steam Chat update. With Steam just reaching 30,000 games (not including DLC or software), it's about time.

Among the other updates, machine-learning driven changes to store discoverability are on the way. And thank goodness, too! I swear, I look at one sexy anime game and suddenly Steam thinks I'm the sexy anime game guy. The machines will learn the truth.

Steam's officially coming to China in partnership with Perfect World, a Chinese studio best known for its MMOs. A new events system will hopefully prove more insightful than alarming (that bing will always make me pee a little bit), and Steam TV will support all games in the near future, ideally making streaming on Steam a somewhat viable home for our beloved Content Creators.

But wait, there's more! The matchmaking tech behind CS:GO will become available to all games. Valve's been banning cheaters for over a decade now, so hopefully the tech proves reliable to smaller online games without the development muscle to make their own or the money to license it elsewhere. A new mobile Steam Chat app will make telling rogue TF2 item traders no much easier. And finally, the special PC cafe build of Steam is getting upgraded. I didn't even know there was a special PC cafe version of Steam to begin with, so it's hard to guess what an upgrade entails. Maybe there's an espresso menu built in this time. I'll take one half latte, three shots, please.

For Valve's complete description of what's coming to Steam in 2019, check out the blog post or read 'em below.