• Kushan@lemmy.world
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    14 days ago

    Steam doesn’t enforce the use of its DRM (which is super easy to bypass anyway but that’s a side note).

    Steam lets you publish your game on their platform and hand out as many keys as you like to resell on other platforms (at no cost) while still doing all the heavy lifting of hosting and distributing.

    Steam doesn’t decide what kinds of titles get published on their platform any more than GoG does, so the bit about remasters, etc. is a bit weird. Besides you the user should get to decide what you want to buy and play.

    I love GoG, but I love Steam as well. They’re not mutually exclusive and you can have both.

    • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      14 days ago

      Yeah, its like a lot of people don’t know you can just… move files out of Steam’s directory, and 95% of the time, game still runs, just, not through Steam.

      What even is a Steam rip, anyway?

      • Aceticon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        14 days ago

        The problem is that with Steam you only know if that works after you bought the game and only know if that works across machines if you upfront have two machines to test it in.

        I mean, if you know upfront that it matters to you (which you might not until, say, your machine breaks and you happen to have no access to the Internet or Steam in your new machine yet, at with point you’ll be thinking “I wish I checked”) you can go through all the hassle of always thoroughly testing it within the refund period of that game, but at that point piracy is less of a hassle.

        Meanwhile some of my GOG offline installers are so old that they have been used on 3 different machines (well, one was the same machine under Windows and under Linux) already.

        Don’t get me wrong - I use both Steam and GOG, my point is that saying that “Steam has DRM free games” is even worse than a half-truth and about as bollocks as saying that a shop selling TVs is selling “Quake game machines” - sure, people with the right skills can get Quake to run in some Smart TVs, but that’s not how the store is selling them as, that’s definitelly not supported by them and they won’t refund you a Smart TV purchase as “not suitable for purpose” if that device fails to runs Quake.

        • Holytimes@sh.itjust.works
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          13 days ago

          The PC wiki actually has a dedicated field for if steam games require it or not. It’s rare if not close to never that you don’t know ahead of time if you actually look.

          Its annoying it’s not on the store page but eh.

  • exu@feditown.com
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    14 days ago

    Official client and support for my platform of choice is a big plus only Steam bothers to have.

  • CaptPretentious@lemmy.world
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    12 days ago

    Fuck GOG.

    Might be different, but when they launched what I think is their current launcher, it was still using example code from pre-Windows Vista days. This was 2020 I reach out to them, because my user files were mapped to a NAS, and the legacy example code they used didn’t support this. Steam has no issues. Epic had no issues.

    All the people wondering why they don’t support Linux… Well that’s because they use outdated Windows code for their launcher.

  • rovingnothing29@lemmy.world
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    14 days ago

    It’s ironic that a platform hell bent on providing DMR-free games and preserving them doesn’t seem interested in supporting the one OS in-line with their views.

  • MystikIncarnate@lemmy.ca
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    14 days ago

    I’m not trying to defend anyone here, though it might seem like that, but I’m not sure why valve is lumped in with this, especially since that’s the steam logo.

    Steam, as a platform, hasn’t released much of anything, ever. Valve has been sitting mostly on the sidelines since half-life 2 episode 2 and HL:Alyx.

    Steam itself is just a marketplace.

    I get that a lot of publishers on steam will fall into the categories of games that are the subject of the meme, but I have a hard time piling steam with the games that are published on it.

    And yes, corporations are not our friends, and all billionaires are bad billionaires, eat the rich and all that… I’m just saying. There’s a lot of bigger, much worse, fish to fry than gaben, valve, and steam in this discussion. That could have been EA’s logo, or the Xbox logo (or ms game studios or whatever) or any number of massive publishers that are relevant here. Using the steam logo is lazy at best.

    • Holytimes@sh.itjust.works
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      13 days ago

      People are stupid and think steam is drm. It’s that simple. For what ever reason people don’t realize that 95% of all games on steam are entirely drm free. Just remove the overlay and you don’t even need steam turned on to play games.

      • LwL@lemmy.world
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        13 days ago

        Steam also offers DRM, it’s just up to devs to use it. And steams DRM is relatively unintrusive.

        I think steam should maybe be in the middle, and the other 2 far on the left.

    • sabin@lemmy.world
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      13 days ago

      I don’t think it’s required for any titles.

      Would still be nice if they’d allow you to run games without the launcher open (assuming you use it to install them) though.