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2. Stay away from CCleaner, its makers are pretty incompetent in deciding what's worth cleaning. CCleaner tends to "clean" up stuff Steam actually needs.
My steam folder is more than 260 Go. It's quite a lot (at least for me _ I usually tend to limit it to ~150Go but I have more games now, so... ^_^). Of course I could simply unistall some games, but I've already uninstalled all the games and softwares I did not wanted to have full time on the computer. Then a friend told me there are other files (motsly dependency and temporary files) that could be erase after a game is installed/uninstalled but steam doesn't automatically erase them.
This is why I was looking for a way to clean them. :-)
1. You can trust it as you can check the code yourself
2. It ONLY cleans runtime installers, not touching Steams bookkeeping
Still, don't expect miracles. The runtime installers aren't that much.
Clearing common redists is stupid - after any crash steam re-dl it -
At us, in Russia, the Internet tariffs are not limited, and we can afford this nonsense, but in many countries there is a limit on the traffic, which in this way is very quickly exhausted ... not to mention the fact that our unlimited Internet tariffs are much cheaper...
Good to know. I guess I'll simply leave my steam files as they are now ^_^ .
And obsolete rules in the windows firewall ccleaner cleans automatically