• prole
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    7 months ago

    Eh… Valve isn’t a publicly traded company. I’m not sure I’m aware of anything Gabe has said or done to imply he’s anti-consumer.

    And he is the one who said that piracy is a service issue, and if you give people convenient access and fair prices, they’ll pay. And he was right.

    And Steam is proof of that. Their refund policy is also far more generous than, at the very least, Sony and Nintendo.

    Any sources to show I’m wrong?

    • @[email protected]
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      77 months ago

      Killed physical ownership of PC games. (Half Life 2 required Steam to work, locking your key to a single account)

      Pioneered lootboxes. (Team Fortress 2)

      Has price parity rules. (Prevent keys being sold cheaper elsewhere so gamers can’t avoid giving 30% of their money to Valve)

      Those aren’t particularly pro-consumer.

      • @[email protected]
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        57 months ago

        Honestly saying that Steam killed physical ownership of games and citing HL2 is a poor example. Just off the top of my head Blizzard beat Valve to this with World of Warcraft. You could buy a physical copy but you couldn’t play it without their servers. Keys were locked to a single account as far as I’m aware.

        Ultimately physical size constraints lead to the demise of physical purchases. That said, Valve in theory has a set-up to allow us to retain our games even if they disappear one day. How that works or how long it would take to happen is a different story, but they do apparently have something like a kill-switch in place.

        TF2 was certainly the first major western game to have loot boxes, but extremely similar gacha systems already existed before this. It would be disingenuous to blame Valve for this, they just hopped on the train.

        MFN clause is really only an issue if it can be proven that it is in place for anticompetitive reasons, and Steam’s rule is not completely inflexible. Also, if the copy is being sold without Steam integration, fine, I can totally see why you shouldn’t need price parity — but if you were to sell a Steam key price parity is entirely fair since the end user is getting access to Valve’s servers. Also if a developer sold a game for the same price with no Steam integration on somewhere like GOG, Valve wouldn’t be getting any cut, the developer would just be making more money (though ironically with less feature integration, it’s not like Steam doesn’t add value).

        On the flip side instead of acting like we said all of Valve’s decisions were pro-consumer and cherry picking a few decisions that aren’t, I can cite:

        • Valve’s work on Wine/Proton
        • the open SteamOS
        • repairability and part availability and compatibility for SteamDeck
        • all of the features Valve adds to Steam and the improvements they’re making over time (it has gotten better), Steam is arguably easier to use and functionally superior to something like EGS
        • the community marketplaces and discussion boards that Steam hosts
        • their work to support users on a variety of platforms with things like Steam Link and even cross-platform support for their utilities and games

        It’s really not like they do literally nothing that is pro-consumer.

      • @[email protected]
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        37 months ago

        They also had to get sued by multiple states before they started offering refunds in the US. Valve doesn’t do anything that doesn’t make them money. They just have a longer term view towards profit than a publicly traded company. That’s what lemmy/reddit doesn’t understand.

        • @sugar_in_your_tea
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          6 months ago

          Yup, Valve isn’t my friend, but there’s a lot of overlap in my and their interests. So I support them, because they support me. They make a product I like, and actively work to make my platform of choice better.

          They’re as good as a friend, but unlike a friend, I’ll drop them as soon as they stop providing value.

    • @[email protected]
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      57 months ago

      Their refund policy is great but it was also the result of a massive lawsuit that they lost because previously refunds were basically not a thing.