• Boozilla
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    168 hours ago

    I hated it in the early days because I wanted to own physical media for my games, etc., and I just didn’t trust an online games library that could vanish in a business deal or bankruptcy. Little did I know that CDs and DVDs have a shelf life. I learned to love Steam over the years.

    Now I hate subscriptions-for-everything and love Steam even more for only charging me once to buy a game.

    • @tfw_no_toiletpaper
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      12 hours ago

      My colleague (late 40s) is still like that. Buys only GoG or I guess physical, although it’s mostly codes nowadays anyway? I mean good for him but he misses out on like 80% of games.

      I don’t think Steam will ever die but I hope it won’t fall into enshittification at some point.

      • @[email protected]
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        4114 hours ago

        I mean yeah.

        I had to install some program and connect online to PLAY A SINGLE PLAYER GAME? I have the CD already and entered my CD key. Why does it need validation?

        This is surely the death of PC gaming.

        • me in 2005
        • @[email protected]
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          1413 hours ago

          Oh MAN. I forgot about those times, hand typing in a 36 character CD key that was spat out by a dot matrix printer with questionable typeset legibility…

          • GreyBeard
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            13 hours ago

            And importing foreign copies because they sold for cheaper in other countries. I still have a Korean box copy of Call of Duty 2. After buying one, my household needed a second so that I could play at the same time as my sibling, and didn’t want to spend a whole $50 for the privilege. They would even send you a copy of the key in email while you waited on the physical box to show up, because the importers knew what they were doing.

        • @IHawkMike
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          412 hours ago

          Same. I think Civ 5 was my gateway game.

          • @[email protected]
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            24 hours ago

            This nightmare of the server being down on day 1 (and sometimes the whole week) is what trained me to never buy a game on release.

            It still happens! To this day!

  • @[email protected]
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    2215 hours ago

    I remember the uproar when CS 1.6 required steam. It was huge and everyone was angry. It took a lot of pull that CS didn’t die because of steam, a lot of players stayed on 1.5 for a long time. But HL2 was too big of an argument to stay off steam.

    • GreyBeard
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      1013 hours ago

      It was Garry’s mod that got me personally. I saw it somewhere and my jaw dropped, I had to have it. Steam didn’t make a lot of sense to me at the time, but the thought of a physics sandbox was practically unheard of before that.

    • @[email protected]
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      14 hours ago

      I was finally convinced when steam sales were incredibly favorable.

      I could either go to Gamespot and buy a used game for $20 + tax and have to deal with some sweat giving me shit about my gaming choices. Or buy that same game digitally for $10.

      Around 2011, I remember not buying consoles anymore and continuing to grow my PC collection.

      Around 2017, my pirating dropped significantly. I think I had like 1000+ steam games from buying so many bundles.

      By 2020, I didn’t pirate a single PC game, the games I bought 10 years ago still work, and I bought a game from the Microsoft Store, only to rebuy it on Steam.

  • Miles O'Brien
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    4518 hours ago

    I mean… It was a gamble. Internet was still young. Speeds weren’t keeping up with game sizes outside a few major cities. I was mailed a few large files because it was quicker than downloading them. Not to mention the desire for physical copies over a digital thing you can lose with a bad hard drive was at an all time high.

    Then people realized the internet wasn’t just nerd shit, ISPs slowly ramped up their DL speeds and suddenly the thing people mocked for not being feasible is doing well because of how convenient it became.

    Gabe even admits he had doubts for awhile.

    I wonder where gaming would be if he had listened to the doubters. There’s no denying valve has had a major impact on modern gaming

    • Illecors
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      14 hours ago

      Someone would’ve picked up the model. The execution? Doubt it.

  • Dyskolos
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    -1816 hours ago

    So what? That’s called survivorship-bias. He can only say that because he got excessively lucky against all odds. Lottery-winners shouldn’t exist either 😉

  • Endymion_Mallorn
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    -2818 hours ago

    I still don’t feel it’s a valid game distribution platform. It’s a DRM platform, that’s all.

    • @zecg
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      1916 hours ago

      Nope, DRM is optional. You can install some games (Rayman Origins, for instance), copy the directory to a new computer with no Steam and run the exe. Steam also has Steam Input, but no one says it’s just a gamepad driver.

    • Annoyed_🦀
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      1816 hours ago

      You might not have know, but Steam game can be without DRM, meaning there’s no need for the client to be running for it to be able to run. I’m not sure how up to date this is, but here’s a list for some of the game. The client are required only when the dev use the overlay or any steam function. You can even find a list of patchable game to make it drm free.

    • @rdri
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      1717 hours ago

      It’s only a little bit more DRM than GOG. It doesn’t automatically adds a DRM layer to all games. There are tons of games that you can backup by simply copying their folders. Even if the DRM layer is added, it’s very light, can be cracked easily and does not add any measurable overhead.

      Steamworks is probably a major thing that makes the games rely on Steam client (and it’s not technically a DRM). But that’s up to developers to make the game work without client if they want, and the functionality often adds a lot of value. This makes the client a part of the product you get, and its value will degrade if you break the client. Some examples of such valuable functionality are overlay and steam input.

    • @aluminium
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      1118 hours ago

      Its not that steam is good, its just that everyone else so extremly dumb and incompetent. And GOG only has a very limited catalogue

  • @[email protected]
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    -3020 hours ago

    Ok so all of a sudden Gabe is everywhere giving quotable quotes. Is this damage control after the bazillion dollar fleet of yachts news, is he about to retire, is it just because of the HL2 anniversary, or…?

    • Virkkunen
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      5019 hours ago

      If you read this article you would know that these are quotes from the Half Life 20 year anniversary documentary released a few weeks ago.

      • @Wav_function
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        14 hours ago

        Also it’s not damage control for the yachts, he’s literally sitting in a yacht when he says this quote lmao

          • @[email protected]
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            -415 hours ago

            On phone it is crammed full of ads, even with Pi-hole. The fact that they’re regurgitating weeks-old news for this particular article doesn’t scream quality either.

            • @[email protected]
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              15 hours ago

              What ads?
              Not only do you spout nonsense about things you don’t bother to read, but you don’t even use adblock either? Lol

              • @[email protected]
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                15 hours ago

                The top of the article has a banner ad, there is a floating footer ad that refreshes every 20 seconds, as you scroll there are text ads, image ads, auto-playing video ads (one which floats to the top of the page once you scroll past it). Those ads. Edit to reply to your edit: pi-hole is an adblocker lol