Valve Faces PRS Lawsuit Over Unlicensed Music in Steam Games, Raising Industry-Wide Licensing Concerns
March 10, 2026
Developers are advised to keep thorough records of music licenses, expirations, and territorial restrictions to reduce downstream legal exposure.
PRS emphasizes that legal action follows consideration of other options and underscores how pivotal soundtracks are to the gaming experience.
A UK lawsuit filed by PRS for Music targets Valve, alleging Valve used PRS-represented music in Steam games without proper licensing dating back to 2003.
The case raises broader questions about who bears licensing responsibilities for in-game music across major platforms, including publishers, developers, and storefronts.
central issue is whether Valve must obtain licenses for PRS music used in games sold via Steam, with potential implications for other storefronts like Sony, Microsoft, and Nintendo.
Analysts note stock-market context around major gaming players, though those figures are separate from the PRS-Valve dispute.
PRS for Music’s chief commercial officer says the organization protects music creators and that licensing ensures fair value and recognition for songwriters behind game soundtracks.
Music licensing in games typically involves synchronization, master recording, and sometimes performance rights; gaps are common, complicating enforcement for platform hosts.
Past licensing issues in games show licenses can expire and require patches or delisting; Steam Direct’s open submission model may weaken licensing oversight.
The lawsuit seeks retroactive licensing or a future agreement and could lead to a court ruling if a settlement isn’t reached.
Steam controls about three-quarters of the PC gaming market, with hundreds of thousands of games and major titles in its catalog.
A ruling against Valve could push stricter content auditing and licensing verification for platform operators across the digital distribution ecosystem.
Summary based on 5 sources
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Sources

MusicRadar • Mar 10, 2026
PRS sues Steam for using music without a licence – for 23 years
Gamereactor • Mar 10, 2026
Valve sued by UK Performing Right Society for alleged use of musical works without permission
TalkEsport • Mar 10, 2026
PRS Sues Valve for Using Music in Video Games Without Permission
Tipranks • Mar 10, 2026
Valve Faces Lawsuit Over Music Rights Issues with Games