• @[email protected]
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    971 month ago

    Your lack of sorting makes it look worse than it is.

    Just looking at the buttons, they clearly have design documents, green is only used on buttons dealing with money.

    Blue buttons primarily deals with social interactions or midrange store tasks

    Grey buttons are for the local client

  • QubaXR
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    561 month ago

    Lol, must be a headache for the devs maintaining it, but from the end user perspective it is way more pleasant of an experience than epic, origin, gog, ubi and whatever else is out there.

  • Ech
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    521 month ago

    I prefer it to most ui these days, tbh. Everything is either hypergeometric and boring, or forces mobile website design into desktop use for no good reason.

    • @felixwhynotOP
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      41 month ago

      It certainly has character!

    • technomad
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      -41 month ago

      Steam does just that though, it’s design is shit for desktop.

      • @[email protected]
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        141 month ago

        Short of one window with multiple columns functioning as one long list of your games I fail to see how you want steam to act even more like a desktop application UI wise.

  • xep
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    421 month ago

    I have no trouble using it in spite of this.

    • @Carnelian
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      421 month ago

      I think it’s actually very nice for the different areas of the program to have a distinct visual identity.

      Imagine making the same type of image about your own furniture. A mish mash of a bunch of different items and styles, but when you put everything together it just looks like home

    • @maymay
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      31 month ago

      Yeah, in spite of it.

      I’m a UX/UI designer. The point of a good user experience design is to make it intuitive. Every button has the same shape and font so you know it’s a button. The colors are consistent across primary and secondary buttons so you know which is the primary action. All the elements are consistent so you know what to expect and where to click, so it’s intuitive.

      You have no trouble using it because you’ve learned where everything is. If you were using it for the first time, or wanted to find some new feature, you would have to click around and learn by trial and error. That’s a bad user experience.

      • JackbyDev
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        11 month ago

        I genuinely don’t care about the buttons not looking the same. I have real complaints though. Primarily that if I’m looking at downloads, go to the store, then click library I see downloads again instead.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 month ago

      Right? The nerd who looks at steam on their phone and then on their desktop and rages about the UI… Like dude, chill.

      The UX in UX/UI stands for User Experience and it’s great.

  • magic_lobster_party
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    371 month ago

    I have never noticed this. Shows how the average consumer doesn’t really care about consistent design languages.

    Given Valve’s history of taking play testing really seriously, I wonder if this is something they’ve realized through user testing?

    • @LwL
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      1 month ago

      Maybe there’s some advantage even because for the ones I’ve used a lot i know at a glance which part of steam they’re in, which wouldn’t be as easy if the only difference was the text. And each part of steam is usually internally consistent, at least mostly.

  • @lordnikon
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    171 month ago

    Whatever you do don’t look up the video where a ux person fixes steam it will make you more annoyed.

  • @Metz
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    141 month ago

    And i hope it never changes. It works. Don’t touch it!

  • @[email protected]
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    131 month ago

    Steam has a decade of different design choices stacked on top of each other. It’s weird AF that they just don’t update some of their old styles, but what’re gonna do?

  • @ocassionallyaduck
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    121 month ago

    Counterpoint: I can identify which part of the UI most of those come from. This level of variety between various UI functions is actually good. I don’t want the interface tabs or the settings tabs to be confused with tabs in the store, even though they are all tabs. I don’t want buttons to all look the same, especially not the huge purchase button. But even accepting that as an outlier I want some buttons to be clearly part of the steam UI and some as part of the site page I am on, so I don’t get confused.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 month ago

      probably boosts user performance for users who have more experience like you but slightly hinders new users who haven’t got the hang of it yet

      if steam prioritizing retention of growing userbase is one of its goals, it’s not a bad strategy in my opinion

  • @[email protected]
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    111 month ago

    i know im silly for this but this is part of steam’s charm for me. i like that it just feels genuine like steam isn’t trying to lull you with all the tried and true marketing and UI best practices. it feels very practical, like using old windows 9X UIs.

  • @[email protected]
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    71 month ago

    While the app is definitely ugly, I spend less time on Steam than in the games I am launching with it. But I do not use any of the community features. If an online search brings me to a steam community, that’s how I end up there, for no other reason really.

  • @[email protected]
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    61 month ago

    Wait till you discover windows ui. Fucking backup tool having advanced options that display 2 of the 3 options and you have to click more to see the third option. and then you realize the advanced options are the basic options. Absolute clown os.

  • @the_radness
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    1 month ago

    Wow. This comments section reads like 50 various versions of Colin Robinson, all swarming on this very post. Every single one of them finding a way to be more pedantic or curmudgeonly than the other.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 month ago

      Well, how else would the energy vampire recharge? Huh? Random Internet person?! HOW?!¿¡