Create a game-night event
Turn a loose group-chat idea into a clear plan with a title, notes, candidate times, and game choices.
Game-night scheduler for Steam friend groups
SteamMeet helps gaming groups pick a time, choose a game, and finalize a plan using calendar-based events and availability polls. Create a clear game-night plan, or sign in with Steam to add friend and library context.
Independent app: SteamMeet is not affiliated with, sponsored by, endorsed by, or operated by Valve Corporation or Steam.
SteamMeet is built for the part of gaming that usually happens outside the game: figuring out when everyone is free, deciding what to play, and turning a vague group chat idea into an actual event.
Instead of asking "who can play Friday?" in three different messages, use a structured game-night plan. Add possible times, list the games your group is considering, and compare availability and game preferences in one place.
Turn a loose group-chat idea into a clear plan with a title, notes, candidate times, and game choices.
Offer a few windows instead of asking everyone to type their whole schedule into chat.
Availability is easier to compare when every friend answers the same way for every time option.
Time is only half the plan. SteamMeet keeps game preference beside availability so the final choice is grounded.
The organizer can see the strongest time and game combination, then share one final plan.
Steam login can add identity, friends, library, and activity context, but the scheduling idea is understandable without it.
Without Steam login
Public pages and demos explain how game-night scheduling works without exposing anyone's Steam library, friend list, or private dashboard.
With Steam login
Signing in with Steam opens the private dashboard and lets SteamMeet use available Steam identity, friend, library, and activity context.
Sample game-night result
A fictional four-person group is choosing a time and a game for a weekend session.
Suggested final plan: Friday 8:00 PM for Cavern Co-op. This demo uses fictional data only.
No. The public pages and fictional demo explain the product. Steam login enhances the private app.
No public page should expose real Steam libraries. Demo pages use fictional data, and real Steam context stays authenticated.
SteamMeet helps groups decide when to play, what to play, and how to turn the decision into a clear event.