No Man’s Sky just did what most survival games never manage: it broke its own ceiling. Again. Thanks to the Voyager update, the game hit its highest Steam player count since its infamous 2016 launch (yeah, it’s been that long). Nearly a decade after being dragged through the mud for overpromising and underdelivering, Hello Games has turned the narrative into a masterclass in long-term redemption.
The numbers don’t lie. Steam charts show No Man’s Sky peaking at over 98,000 concurrent players—just shy of the six-figure mark it hasn’t touched since launch week. And this isn’t a fluke. It’s the result of yet another free update that actually delivers.
Well damn, No Man’s Sky space travel looks amazing, especially with custom ships that are made with the new ship building feature such as this Boba Fett Slave 1 starship from Star Wars!
Video and ship created by Reddit user Itachii47. #NoMansSky pic.twitter.com/bpgJqUYRE2
— Rebs Gaming (@Mr_Rebs_) August 29, 2025
The Voyager update didn’t just add content—it restructured the way players interact with the universe. Custom starships, spacewalks, new traversal mechanics, and deeper sandbox freedom have turned No Man’s Sky into the space sim it always wanted to be. It’s not just about exploration anymore—it’s about expression.
And players? They are responding! The spike wasn’t driven by marketing hype—it was organic. Word-of-mouth, community buzz, and the kind of update cadence that most AAA studios can’t sustain.
Let’s rewind. No Man’s Sky launched in 2016 with sky-high expectations and crater-level disappointment. But Hello Games didn’t fold. They went quiet, rebuilt the game from the inside out, and dropped update after update—each one free, each one meaningful.
Now, in 2025, No Man’s Sky isn’t just surviving. It’s thriving. And Voyager proves that Hello Games understands what most studios miss: players don’t need perfection at launch. They need commitment.
No Man’s Sky didn’t just bounce back—it evolved. The Voyager update is a reminder that redemption isn’t just possible—it’s playable. Nearly 100K players logged in to see what changed, and they weren’t disappointed.
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