Hey everyone,
it’s me again, one of the two developers behind GameVault, a self-hosted gaming platform similar to how Plex/Jellyfin is for your movies and series, but for your game collection. If you’ve hoarded a bunch of games over the years, this app is going to be your best friend. Think of it as your own personal Steam, hosted on your own server.
If you haven’t heard of GameVault yet, you can check it out here and get started within 5 minutes—seriously, it’s a game changer.
For those who already know GameVault, or its old name He-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named, we are excited to tell you we just launched a major update. I’m talking a massive overhaul—so much so, that we could’ve rebuilt the whole thing from scratch. Here’s the big news: We’re no longer relying on RAWG or Google Images for game metadata. Instead, we’ve officially partnered with IGDB/Twitch for a more reliable and extended metadata experience!
But it doesn’t stop there. We’ve also rolled out a new plugin system and a metadata framework that allows you to connect to multiple metadata providers at once. It’s never been this cool to run your own Steam-like platform right from your good ol’ 19" incher below your desk!
What’s new in this update?
- IGDB/Twitch Integration: Say goodbye to unreliable metadata scrapers. Now you can enjoy game info sourced directly from IGDB.
- Customizable Metadata: Edit and fine-tune game metadata with ease. Your changes are saved separately, so the original data stays intact.
- Plugin System: Build your own plugins for metadata or connect to as many sources as you want—unlimited flexibility!
- Parental Controls: Manage age-appropriate access for the family and children.
- Built-in Media Player: Watch game trailers and gameplay videos directly in GameVault.
- UI Overhaul: A fresh, streamlined look for the app, community, game and admin interface.
- Halloween Theme: For GameVault+ users, we’ve added a spooky Halloween skin just in time for the season!
Things to keep in mind when updating:
- GameVault Client v1.12 is now required for servers running v13 or above.
- Older clients won’t work on servers that have been updated to v13.
For a smooth update and a guide on how to use all these new features, check out the detailed migration instructions in the server changelogs. As always, if you hit any snags, feel free to reach out to us on Discord.
If you run into any issues or need help with the migration, feel free to join and open a ticket in our Discord community—we’re always happy to help!
If you want to support our pet-project and keep most upcoming features of GameVault free for everyone, consider subscribing to GameVault+ or making a one-time donation. Every little bit fuels our passion to keep building and improving!
Thanks for everything! We’re more than 800 Members on our discord now and I can’t wait to hear what you think of the latest version.
I don’t understand the appeal. But maybe that’s because 99% of my games are through steam where this is kind of already a basic feature?
Am I misunderstanding the use case here? Someone explain what is exciting about this, because the post and the link for people who haven’t heard of it didn’t really manage to explain how or why this is cool or useful in any meaningful detail.
You can buy games in other platforms and as a result have actual proper copies that you can download and keep indefinitely. With Steam you are buying a restricted license to download and use games, and it is very convenient, but at the end of the day you can lose access for various reasons. A common one is that the upstream developers or company decide to break something. For example, companies that add DRM or account requirements after you already bought the game.
If you buy games from some other places like GoG you get the full game files intended to be archived and run like any other program. GameVault makes it easier to organize these games and get some of the convenience of Steam back while using games you properly own.
Maybe those help some people…
Backup steam games: https://help.steampowered.com/en/faqs/view/4593-5CB7-DC3C-64F0
For the Steam API: https://gitlab.com/Mr_Goldberg/goldberg_emulator
For SteamStub DRM: https://github.com/atom0s/Steamless
Okay but like, what does it do? That’s what I’m not understanding. Are you able and willing to explain it at all?