🛡️ Why Steam Needs a “Confirmed Trade” Button – Solving the Item Scam Problem
- RoamerLee

- 2025년 8월 19일
- 2분 분량
최종 수정일: 2025년 8월 27일

The Problem with Steam Trades

Trading on Steam is quick and convenient, but it comes with a huge risk. Items can be sent in just a few clicks, yet the money almost always moves outside of Steam—through PayPal, cryptocurrency, or direct bank transfers. None of this is tracked by Valve, and that’s exactly why scams are still so common.
One side sends the item and never gets paid. Another side sends the money and never receives the item. Victims are left without evidence, and Valve doesn’t intervene. This isn’t just a player-to-player issue—it’s a flaw in the system itself.
A Simple Fix: The “Confirmed Trade” Button
To close this gap, Steam needs a new layer of protection: a Confirmed Trade button. It would work as an extra step, built on three-way authentication:
Log into your Steam account.
Verify with Steam Guard.
Confirm with an external authenticator app(Google Authenticator, Authy, etc.).
And importantly, this feature would only be accessible through the official Steam mobile app on iOS and Android. If we’re dealing with digital items worth hundreds of dollars, security should never be negotiable.
How It Would Work in Practice
Here’s how a safer trade would look:
The seller sends a knife or item to the buyer.
The buyer receives it and can try it in-game.
If satisfied, the buyer presses Confirmed Trade and sends payment (ideally via PayPal invoice for documentation).
The seller confirms once payment is received.
Only after both sides confirm does Steam finalize the trade and automatically generate a timestamped, downloadable receipt.
This receipt could be submitted to Steam support or even PayPal if there’s a dispute. It’s a simple but powerful way to create trust and evidence.
Rethinking Trade Holds
Right now, Steam’s 7-day trade hold means items automatically go through even if one side fails to pay. With Confirmed Trade, nothing gets finalized until both parties approve. No excuses, no “I’ll pay later” scams—just mutual confirmation.
Legal Challenges and Limitations
Of course, Valve has its reasons for avoiding official involvement with real-money trades. In fact, some countries ban cash transactions for digital goods entirely.
But this system doesn’t ask Valve to handle payments directly. It only asks for a transparent, documented process that protects both sides. Even without handling money, Valve could still dramatically reduce scams by ensuring trades are not final until both users confirm.
Final Thoughts
The Confirmed Trade button could prevent scams, empower players, and bring real trust into digital item trading. Valve doesn’t need to become PayPal—but they do need to provide the structure for safer transactions.
If you’ve ever worried about being scammed in a trade, you know how much this feature would mean. And if you agree, spread the word—maybe one day, Valve will finally implement it.







