Steam Family Library 2.0 — Game Sharing Just Got Way Better
Valve’s Family Library 2.0 update landed quietly last week and ends the most annoying parts of family game sharing.
The biggest change: simultaneous play across family members. Your account no longer locks the game when one family member is using it. Each family member effectively has their own copy as long as one person in the family owns the title — within Valve’s standard family-of-six limit.
The second change is a much smarter shared-library UI. Each family member sees a unified library that includes their own purchases plus the family pool, with clean filtering, family-member tags, and proper achievement separation. Save data stays per-member.
There are still gaps. Some publishers can opt out of family sharing for specific titles, and online multiplayer is still per-license for some games. But the core experience is dramatically smoother than the previous Family Sharing system.
Family Library 2.0 is the upgrade Valve should have shipped five years ago. Simultaneous play alone makes this a household-level quality-of-life win.

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