Over a dozen games, including two Star Wars titles, published directly by Disney or one of its many subsidiaries, have suddenly been removed from Steam. As far as we can tell there was no warning for this, and Disney hasn’t explained why the games were removed. It’s the second time this year that Disney has yanked a dozen or more games from Valve’s platform with no heads-up.
On April 14, as shared by deals guru Wario64, Disney quietly delisted 15 PC games from Steam. We can see this thanks to SteamDB tracking all the various changes that happen every day on Steam’s backend. And in there, we can spot 15 Disney titles that have been “retired” from the store. Here’s the list of games:
- Disney – Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End
- Planet of the Apes: Last Frontier
- Star Wars: Rebellion
- Star Wars: Dark Forces (Original version)
- Outlaws & A Handful of Missions (Original version)
- Alice in Wonderland
- Disney’s Chicken Little
- Tangled
- G-Force
- Disney’s Treasure Planet: Battle of Procyon
- Disney Universe
- Disney Princess: My Fairytale Adventure
- Disney’s High School Musical 3: Senior Year Dance
- Disney & Pixar – Brave: The Video Game
- Bolt
Sure, many of these games probably aren’t very popular and haven’t sold many copies in 2026. I imagine not a lot of people are clamoring to play Disney Universe these days. Or Bolt. Still, that doesn’t mean they should be delisted from Steam and made harder to buy and play in the future. It’s a frustrating situation. If you already own the games, you can still download and play them, but anyone wishing to buy Disney’s High School Musical 3: Senior Year Dance on Steam is out of luck now.
In a vacuum, this is an odd bit of news, but if we look at what Disney did earlier this year, it does seem to indicate that something is happening. In January, as reported by PC Gamer, Disney removed 14 games from Steam with no warning. Disney has yet to provide a reason for why these 29 games in total have been delisted from Steam.
Here are the games that got delisted earlier this year:
- Armed and Dangerous
- The Princess and the Frog
- Cars Radiator Springs Adventures
- Disney Fairies: Tinkerbell’s Adventure
- Toy Story Mania
- Winnie the Pooh
- Lucidity
- Disney – Planes
- Chicken Little Ace in Action
- Finding Nemo
- Phineas and Ferb: New Inventions
- Disney’s Hercules
- Stunt Island
- Afterlife
One theory is that the recent delistings might involve Disney’s big $1.5 billion investment into Fortnite maker Epic. Perhaps Disney and Epic’s partnership includes more than a reported extraction shooter starring Disney characters. Perhaps part of the deal will force many (or all?) of Disney’s PC games to become Epic Store exclusives in the near future. I’m not convinced that gamers in 2026 will care about stuff like Bolt or G-Force suddenly being locked behind Epic’s digital storefront, but if more Star Wars titles make the leap, that could force some people to install EGS. Or they’ll go sailing on the high seas to find the content they be lookin’ for.