• AnyOldName3
    link
    616 hours ago

    To go one better, there’s http://isthereanydeal.com/, which tracks prices across a bunch of vetted key retailers (i.e. companies that buy wholesale keys from publishers and sell them to users, but not grey-market or dodgy sites) so you can see where’s cheapest and get notified of discounts etc.

    Why check GreenManGaming and Steam (and potentially a bunch of their competitors, too) when you could check one site and know who’s best?

    I’ve accidentally made this read like an ad, but they’ve not paid me to say this, I just always check the site before buying games, and have either saved loads of money by doing so over the years, or have ended up buying a bunch of things I’d have ignored on the grounds they were too expensive otherwise. I don’t know in which direction, but it’s definitely changed the amount I’ve spent on games over the last ten years.

    • CALIGVLA
      link
      fedilink
      English
      21 hour ago

      For real, I’ve saved a countless amount of money on games by using this site for the last decade or so. If you’re gaming on PC and you don’t already use it (or something similar) then you’re doing yourself (and your wallet) a massive disservice.

    • @taiyang
      link
      95 hours ago

      I second this recommendation. They “recently” updated their site, too, so it’s got a lot of great filters and such. I’m always adding things to my steam wishlist (because friends use that) but http://isthereanydeal.com can sync up and notify you when games are 50%, 90%, or even 99% off!

      Use code “AnyOldName3” to get your next game recommendation free.

      Seriously though, there is no code, the service is free and I think it’s mostly made by people addicted to being patient gamers. I blame it exclusively for me taking an unplayed backlog of like 2000 different steam games…

      • Kushan
        link
        English
        54 hours ago

        In addendum, they also operate a browser extension that puts the same pricing info directly into steam itself, as well as other enhancements:

        https://augmentedsteam.com/

        Well worth having installed, that way you can browse steam (via your browser) as normal and know if a good deal is actually good.

    • @yokonzoOP
      link
      0
      edit-2
      3 hours ago

      So to offer a reason “why” specifically for me it was because I have been hanging out with some game devs lately and they f****** hate steam, like it is the vein of their existence, so they showed me this one site and they were like this is the best one in our opinion, of course it’s a little biased but I can see where they’re coming from

      Edit: chill out y’all I’m just relaying what I was told, I use steam too, but it also does have a huge grasp on the market and that makes it unfavorable for devs

      • AngryMob
        link
        fedilink
        44 hours ago

        The only game devs i know who hate steam are shovelware or low effort devs. Or i guess contrarians that just want attention.

        I get it, steam takes a big cut. But you make more releasing on steam alone than every other site combined, by a lot. You get more audience, word of mouth, advertising, you get more api features, etc.

        And i say this as a fan of GMG and GOG. I want them to be the top dogs, and i like posts that give them more attention.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          33 hours ago

          just cause you recognize that you gotta use steam if you wanna make a living, doesn’t mean you can’t hate steam and wish they didn’t have such a monopoly. lots of people use things they hate, just cause that’s the meta, y’know?

          • AngryMob
            link
            fedilink
            42 hours ago

            But where are the actual good reasons for the hate?

            “Ugh i have to use this genuinely good storefront if i want to be successful” is not a logical reason. Its not a monopoly. Consoles and mobile are still a thing afterall, even if we ignore all the pc stores and the fact that plenty of games do fine without steam, including indie.