DarylDutch,

I get it. Steam doesn’t seem to do exclusivity deals with 3rd party titles. So you could still sell your game on gog and humble without issue.

Kecessa,

They control prices though, can’t sell for less on another platform.

Zorque,

Of course you can, just not steam keys.

Honytawk,

If it was only about Steam keys, there wouldn’t have been a lawsuit.

Paranomaly, (edited )
@Paranomaly@sh.itjust.works avatar

They don’t though? Devs set the price. Steam just says that you need the same base price there as elsewhere.

rambaroo,

Yeah because if you don’t, they delist your game. That’s the literal definition of anti-competitiveness. They could never get away with that if they weren’t a monopoly.

stillwater,

That’s the literal definition of anti-competitiveness.

No it isn’t. That’s actually a very common store policy that’s been in place since the days of brick and mortar locations. Why do you think you never see any platform listing games at higher or lower full retail prices than every other one regularly, even when they’re not on Steam?

Where did you get the idea that this was the definition of anti-competitive? There are so many more things that define it more, like buying up all the competition or taking a big hit on loss leading pricing to force the competition to undercut themselves and collapse.

UntouchedWagons,
@UntouchedWagons@lemmy.ca avatar

Is Steam really a monopoly when Valve doesn’t try to stifle competition and no other company could be bothered (besides maybe GOG) to make a half decent store?

rikudou,
@rikudou@lemmings.world avatar

Yes. Nothing you said doesn’t change the fact it’s a monopoly. Sure, it might not be a Microsoft-level-evil monopoly, and as far as monopolies go, this is probably the best one, but it’s still a monopoly.

theneverfox,
@theneverfox@pawb.social avatar

Monopsony - a monopoly but instead of controlling production, you control the marketplace, like Amazon

Steam is almost at that level, but they at least do it by tempting people with features and don’t try to lock you in… Trouble with exchanges is that fragmentation really sucks for everyone

rikudou,
@rikudou@lemmings.world avatar

As I said, I agree that Steam is great. But a monopoly (or monopsony - never heard the word before) is always bad. Yes, Steam is great, but the ownership will change one day. And as it seems everyone wants to take every company public, I’m pretty sure that Steam will be taken public eventually. And the whole wheel of shit will start rolling.

theneverfox,
@theneverfox@pawb.social avatar

True, but steam is about as good as it gets. They aren’t actually a monoposody, they’re just the biggest marketplace.

They don’t do exclusives, don’t restrict you from selling elsewhere, they’ll integrate with any piece of software (including things you’ve installed externally or will install other launchers for you - even if they contain competing storefronts)

They do have competition, except they did the one thing companies hate to do most at this stage - they compete. They’re the only real option because they limit nothing from their customers and offer better features. Epic offers free games, Microsoft comes pre-installed on most gaming computers, Amazon has everyone’s payment details already, and despite it all these alternatives steam is still the best option in every regard

Yes, it’s almost guaranteed to go to shit eventually, but what better system is there? There’s no one more trustworthy to run the primary gaming marketplace… They’ve even built their company structure and policies to resist the pull of enshittification.

A new company isn’t a good answer, a distributed system wouldn’t work well for this application, and even nonprofits struggle to resist enshittification as well as valve has done

What can we do except keep watch and push back if valve goes out of bounds?

golli, (edited )

One aspect through which one could argue that they might stifle competition is their price parity rule, for which it seems they are being sued. See here (not sure if there is any new development.

Hard to compete with steam if you cant at least do it through lower pricing. Although this article suggests that at least for epic exclusives publisher seem to prefer to just pocket the difference, rather than pass on those savings.

Zorque,

Isn't that just saying you can't sell access to a game on steam (through a steam key) for a lower price than what's on Steam? It's not like they can't just offer a lower price... just that they can't offer it for a lower price bundled with Steam access.

So they can offer a lower price, just not as a third party through Steam itself.

golli,

I think you are right, the first article I linked was a bit ambiguous about it, but rereading the second one it seems that I misunderstood it and you are right.

Lojcs,

If that’s the case, why do people use sites like humble bundle when they could individually buy the games from steam?

ChairmanMeow,
@ChairmanMeow@programming.dev avatar

Humble Bundle has a special relationship with Valve iirc, because of the charity work they do.

NightOwl,

Doesn’t explain all the other games sold for cheaper than steam when you take a look at isthereanydeals. Or the bundles fanatical offers with no charity involved.

Zorque,

Could be secondhand key resellers who have no deals with Steam regarding sales.

Paranomaly,
@Paranomaly@sh.itjust.works avatar

I believe it means base price and not sale prices

Paranomaly,
@Paranomaly@sh.itjust.works avatar

I believe it means base price and not sale prices. It’s fine for a game to go on sale for lower than Steam, but the base price can’t be $60 Steam $50 Epic as an example.

SnipingNinja,

That is also allowed, but not if Epic purchase allows you to play the game on steam too

Honytawk,

If it was only about Steam Keys, there wouldn’t have been a lawsuit.

Kecessa,

No it means that if the game is for sale on Steam then it can be sold elsewhere (GOG, EPIC…) but it’s in the contract with Steam that it can’t be sold for a lower price elsewhere, it’s not about Steam keys sold by third party vendors.

hh93,

It is a monopoly - they just don’t abuse it as much against their audience.

For developers it’s either take their 30% deal or just don’t sell your game because a lot of people only use steam.

Not even Cyberpunk or the Witcher could sell more on gog than on steam even though you knew that there the developers got 100% of the money spent. Gwent standalone flopped so hard on GOG that it had to be rereleased with limited features on steam and sold more there

People are just fundamentally lazy so it totally is a problem that you have one store with such a massive market share even if it’s very convenient for the end-user they can completely exploit their position against publishers.

Sure EPICs way of making games exclusive to their store is not elegant but without that no-one would choose that store over steam

Molecular0079,

I am not sure if it’s just people being lazy. Steam legitimately is a good gaming platform. It just has so many features that really bring the PC platform to the level of consoles in terms of UX. Social features, discussion boards, reviews, matchmaking, chat, broadcasting, remote streaming, all this alongside a kickass store. That’s why Valve could roll out something like Steam OS and not have it feel woefully inadequate compared to what consoles offer.

Bread,

Don’t forget notes for games, steam workshop, and for those of us open source enthusiasts, making easy/reliable gaming on Linux. It has never been so good being a Linux gamer.

aard, (edited )
@aard@kyu.de avatar

Many years ago I bought some old DOS game where Linux runtimes using the original files exists on GOG. What I expected was a disk image or a zip containing the files - what I got was some exe containing the files. Why would I ever try to buy something from someone fucking up something that simple again?

I might buy some indie games from a developer directly - but with a middleman steam is the only option.

criticalimpact,

That’s not a steam issue, that’s a developer/publisher issue Plenty of old Scumm based games work by just pointing scummvm at the game directory

aard,
@aard@kyu.de avatar

Ah, seems I missed a “on GOG” in the reply.

HollowNotion,

This is partially on these companies for failing to provide an equal experience to Steam on their platform. I bought Witcher III in GoG to support the devs, and my reward was a lost save by the time the DLCs came out, because their client didn’t have cloud saves. So guess where I bought their stuff from there on? Sure, they added these features later but for some people the damage is already done.

jikel,

Tell me a game store that supports Linux out of the box (not messing with wine stuff or lutris)

woelkchen,
@woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

If you’re so sure Steam is a monopoly, can you please provide any evidence for that? To be clear, being very successful does not make someone a monopolist.

If Valve were a monopolist, they’d be listed here: …europa.eu/commission-designates-six-gatekeepers-…

Phil_in_here,

Yeah, to say a successful business is a monopoly because it is far reaching is absurd.

Call me when Good-Old-Epic-Steam launches.

rambaroo,

The fact that there are tons of games only available on steam should tell you it’s a monopoly.

It’s fucking shocking to me that so many people here actually believe that Valve isn’t a monopoly. You must have your head way up your ass.

skulkingaround,

How many games are actually steam exclusive on PC though, not counting 50 cent shovelware crap? A good chunk of the best selling PC games ever (minecraft for example) are not even available on steam.

I just went through the top 10 on steam and other than counter strike, which is literally made by valve, all of them are available elsewhere.

stillwater,

Because that’s not at all how a monopoly is defined and you ignored the concept of retail exclusivity deals to make this statement lol.

Kecessa,

They account for about 75% of game sales on PC from what I’m finding, it’s a “virtual monopoly”, i.e. they have enough reach to control the market even if they have competitors.

woelkchen,
@woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

75% of the units sold or 75% of the overall revemue. Given that the most successful PC games aren’t even on Steam, the latter seems unlikely to me. Roblox alone is a sustained revenue stream in insanely high numbers.

Do they block the competition in any way? They aren’t the stewards of Windows. Epic buys exclusive rights to games. Does Valve do the same? On Steam Deck, there’s even an entire independent app store (Discover with Flathub) enabled right out of the box. That’s how the community made Minecraft and Heroic Game Launcher available. Official EGS, GamePass, and GOG launchers could be made available via Flathub but MS etc. choose not to.

Kecessa,

They have their own unethical business practice they’re getting sued for (preventing sales at a lower price on competing platforms) and just because you agree with what they do now doesn’t mean it’s not a risk to have such a behemoth in the market, Gaben is nice now, it just needs him changing his mind or retiring/dying and shit could hit the fan real quick.

woelkchen,
@woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

It’s not about Valve or Newell being nice or not, it’s about whether Valve has a monopoly and the EU just recently looked at digital markets closely and determined that Valve is not a gatekeeper.

Kecessa, (edited )

Because of the way they act at the moment, it doesn’t mean that they’re not in a monopoly position.

Turns out it’s simply because the EU didn’t even study their case because the PC gaming market is too small to bother 🤡

woelkchen,
@woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

Well, the EU made a list of monopolists in digital markets and decided that Valve is not one of them and that has nothing to do with current behavior.

Kecessa, (edited )

Find me a source confirming that they actually studied Steam’s position in their market. They have specific criterias, including financial and user ones, and Steam doesn’t meet them… oopsy!

woelkchen,
@woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

Find me a source confirming that they actually studied Steam’s position in their market.

I found a super recent source that does not list Valve as a monopolist. Maybe you should go and find a credible source other than “Trust me, bro” that Steam is a monopoly.

They have specific criterias, including financial and user ones, and Steam doesn’t meet them… oopsy!

So Steam does not rake in so much money to hog the market and also does not have enough users to hog the customer base. If anything is an oopsy, it’s you accidentally admitting that Steam is not a monopoly. Good we cleared that up!

Kecessa, (edited )

No, what I’m saying is that they didn’t check the PC gaming platform market at all because it doesn’t fit the criterias necessary for them to pay attention to it, which means that Steam not being on the list doesn’t mean they’re not a monopoly. You try to use that as proof, yet the European Union just didn’t check what’s happening in that market at all!

There’s tons of monopolies they don’t list because the market they’re in is too small to bother, it doesn’t mean they’re not monopolies.

woelkchen,
@woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

You try to use that as proof, yet the European Union just didn’t check what’s happening in that market at all!

Funny how nobody other random commentators on the internet and their “Trust me, bro” line of evidence sees Steam as a monopoly and you people conveniently keep forgetting that the biggest PC games – Roblox, Minecraft, and Fortnite – are not on Steam and the combined active user base of those three games dwarf the active Steam user base. So the gatekeeper list by the EU does not count. Great. Where are the antitrust rulings on Steam by the USA, the UK, Japan, Brazil, Kenya, or any other regulatory body on the planet?

Kecessa,

“This video game store isn’t a monopoly because these video games by three different companies have more daily users when combined together!”

I hope you realise how little sense that makes…

As a video game store they are the biggest one in term of total users and number of games for sale, are you questioning that?

woelkchen,
@woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

As a video game store they are the biggest one in term of total users and number of games for sale, are you questioning that?

How many users get Fortnite from Epic Games Store and how many get Minecraft from Microsoft Store? What does the “Trust me, bro” line of evidence say about those? None of you provide anything facts-based after all…

stillwater,

You’re the one that needs to provide a source since this was your original claim to refute someone else’s cited source. Don’t sealion and constantly ask someone else for more and more and more sources when they’ve already provided one and you’ve provided none.

Kecessa, (edited )

They haven’t provided a source! They extrapolated from data they don’t understand! The criterias for companies to be analysed under the DMA are public and the PC video game market just doesn’t fit! The reason Steam isn’t on the list isn’t because it’s not a monopoly, it’s they the industry they I operate in isn’t taken in consideration by the law.

You could be the only online windmill hat seller, the EU wouldn’t put you on the DMA list because you wouldn’t sell 6.5B euros worth every year and your market valuation wouldn’t be 65B euros. It doesn’t mean you wouldn’t have a monopoly!

Heck, Valve doesn’t even have a market valuation because it’s not public! They’re evaluated to be worth less than 10B USD and it’s purely surveillance, that’s a long fucking way to the minimum threshold required be the DMA isn’t it? They’re still the biggest player in the PC video game sales market.

stillwater,

They have their own unethical business practice they’re getting sued for (preventing sales at a lower price on competing platforms)

Who’s suing them for something so boilerplate? This isn’t that stupid frivolous lawsuit from Wolfire you’re referring to, is it?

Kecessa,

Frivolous? The judge has accepted new evidence and the lawsuit has been allowed to proceed.

DLSchichtl,

Nintendo accounts for 100% of games on the Switch. Microsoft with the Xbox. Heck, even Sony. And people making games for PC don’t have to ask Valve’s permission.

Shit. Bestselling PC game of all time. Minecraft. Not available on Steam.

Kecessa,

Nintendo is compared to other console manufacturers.

Microsoft is considered to be in a position of monopoly in the OS market, yet they’re not the ones building the PC itself.

Holy fuck did I just enter a freaking asylum or something?

Zorque,

One can have a monopoly without directly trying for it. Especially when it comes to services with a lot infrastructure involved. Once you make those investments, it's hard for anyone to compete against them.

A monopoly just means you control a significant amount of the market. I think, technically, they would fall under oligopoly. Where a few businesses have control of the market instead of just a single business. But the point is they have a far larger share of the market than most others. This is mostly because they create a product that people want to use, instead of making a service that unfairly captures the market through things like game exclusivity or hostile takeovers.

woelkchen,
@woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

But when the EU recently announced service gatekeepers, Valve was not among them. Microsoft is.

Kecessa,

*Because they don’t meat the minimum financial and monthly user criterias to be taken into consideration when analyzing the monopoly status of their platform

You forgot to add that part 👍

woelkchen,
@woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

Because they don’t meat the minimum financial and monthly user criterias to be taken into consideration when analyzing the monopoly status of their platform

So Steam does not meet / meat🥩 the financial and monthly user numbers to count as a monopoly? So Steam is not a monopoly then. Great.

Kecessa,

No, the PC videogame market is too small for the European Union to analyse it.

If the local hardware store is the only one selling screws for 100km around and it doesn’t show up on their list, does it means they don’t have a monopoly or it simply means that they don’t bother checking that because the hardware store doesn’t:

Make 6.5B a year/doesn’t have a market capitalization of 65B

Doesn’t have 45m monthly users in the union AND 10k business users in the union

Meets those criterias three years in a row

Because these are the criterias required for the EU to take the time to analyze a companies’ position in their market.

woelkchen,
@woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

No, the PC videogame market is too small for the European Union to analyse it.

Then please provide ANY form of facts-based analysis that Steam is a monopoly and no “Trust me, bro” isn’t that.

Kecessa,

The European Union considers some companies to be a monopoly with a smaller market presence than Steam has in the PC video games sales market. That comes from your own source buddy.

woelkchen,
@woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

That comes from your own source buddy.

You continue to deflect that you have no proof that Steam is a monopoly.

Kecessa, (edited )

Your whole argument to show that it isn’t is based on ignoring their market dominance and referencing the DMA that hasn’t even been used to analyze Steam’s position in their market because the PC video game market as a whole isn’t big enough to be covered by the DMA.

woelkchen,
@woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

You have no proof that it isn’t either 🤷

The proof, that I already mentioned, is the fact that no antitrust agency anywhere convicted Valve of anything related to monopoly.

p03locke,
@p03locke@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

It’s a monopoly, but it’s one that a big company like EA or Epic Games can defeat. But, they have to actually put in the work and effort to present an experience that isn’t an enshittified version of Steam.

So far, none of them are willing to put in the time, so they don’t get the prize.

teolan, (edited )
@teolan@lemmy.world avatar

Not even Cyberpunk or the Witcher could sell more on gog than on steam even though you knew that there the developers got 100% of the money spent.

Most gamers don’t know and/or don’t care, so they will take the least resistance path, which is Steam.

Steam has a “most favoured nation clause” which prevents companies from actually selling for cheaper on other platform. This is how steam maintains its monopoly. If it were possible for CD Projekt Red to sell it cheaper outside of steam it would force steam to actually charge developers less.

Edit: see below, it’s actually not that clear.

Chailles,
@Chailles@lemmy.world avatar

They could sell for cheaper, they just can’t sell Steam Keys specifically for cheaper than what’s on Steam itself. Which makes sense honestly, you’re literally using their service for both presence and distribution.

teolan,
@teolan@lemmy.world avatar

Looking at steam’s own policies, this is true for steam keys, but there is an an going lawsuit that claims steam also makes this apply to non steam-enabled games: arstechnica.com/…/valve-issues-scathing-reply-ove…

But looking mosre closely than I did previously this is based on:

  1. An contract that is apparently not public
  2. A 1 time example that Valve denies

So I don’t really know, but if what valve says is true (which looks like it is), then I don’t see any monopoly abuse indeed.

They do have a monopoly, but it’s in large part for providing a better service. As a Linux user, I prefer Valve 100% over Epic that buys Rocket league and discontinues linux support. I do prefer Itch and GOG for the possibility of no-DRM games, but I’ve got to say it’s overall a worse experience (no auto updates, no social features etc…)

I made my initial comment after watching: www.youtube.com/watch?v=mOEG5qmMQas which suggested that Steam applied the MFN for non steam - enabled games too, but was done prior to Valve’s response.

Chailles,
@Chailles@lemmy.world avatar

For the price parity thing, there’s the game Tales of Maj’Eyal that is $6.99 USD on Steam but is free on their website te4.org. Cataclysm: Dark Days Ahead is an open source project, but is on Steam for $19.99 USD. Caves of Qud is actually on sale now on GOG, but the Itch.io and Steam version aren’t. Sure, these may just be because traditional roguelikes don’t garner that much attention, but they are cases nonetheless that show otherwise.

The lack of auto-updates can sometimes be good. StarSector updated relatively recently and if they actually updated automatically (even if they offered an option to disable it, they update so infrequently, I’d probably have neglected it), my save and all my mods for it would just break, or worse break silentl until it was too late.

teolan,
@teolan@lemmy.world avatar

Thinking about it there are also multiple FLOSS games that are free on GitHub/Linux repos but paid on Steam. For example Mindustry and Pixel dungeon.

pkpenguin,

This is still easily verifiably untrue in practice. Go to isthereanydeal and you’ll see verified, approved Steam key retailers running sales for under the Steam price on hundreds of games literally every day. Humble offers a global discount on all keys in their store if you’re s subscriber, undercutting virtually every Steam page. That’s not to mention the bundles they sell which regularly cut hundreds of dollars of keys down to a few bucks.

teolan,
@teolan@lemmy.world avatar

The steam documentation mentions for keys that while it is OK to run sales on different platforms at different times, the steam store must have similar sales within a reasonable time period, and he base price must not be higher on steam.

DLSchichtl,

deleted_by_author

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  • teolan,
    @teolan@lemmy.world avatar

    Done

    asexualchangeling,

    Sure EPICs way of making games exclusive to their store is not elegant but without that no-one would choose that store over steam

    Personally Epic doing this is one of the reasons I still refuse to give epic my card details

    bogdugg,
    @bogdugg@sh.itjust.works avatar

    I think it’s better to reframe the question as “Are there downsides to Valve’s PC market dominance?” or “How is Steam’s 30% cut different from Xbox or Playstation?”

    For the latter: it’s worth noting that Microsoft and Sony sell their hardware at a loss, and make up the difference through software, so there are obvious developer benefits to the 70-30 split. For Steam, the equivalent value-add for developers is only the platform itself, and I would wager for many of those developers the biggest reason for selling on Steam is not the feature set - though obviously useful - but because that’s where the users are.

    So, users get a feature-rich distribution platform, and developers (and by extension users) pay a tax to access those users. So the question is, how fair is that tax, and what effect does that tax have on the games that get made? Your view on that is going to depend on what you want from Steam, but more relevant I think is how much Steam costs to operate. How much of that 30% cut feeds back into Steam? My guess is not much; though I could be wrong.

    But anyway, let’s imagine you took away half the 30% cut. Where does that money go? Well, one of two places: either your pocket, or the developers (or publishers) pocket (depending on how the change affects pricing). The benefits to your pocket are obvious, but what if developers just charge the same price? Well, as far as I’m aware, a lot of games are just not profitable - I read somewhere that for every 10 games, 7 fail, 2 break even, and 1 is a huge success - so my personal view is that this is an industry where developers need all the help they can get. If that extra 15% helps them stay afloat long enough to put out the next thing without selling their soul to Microsoft or Sony or whoever is buying up companies these days, and Steam isn’t severely negatively impacted, I’d call that a win.

    But of course, that won’t happen, because Steam has no reason to change. That’s where the users are, and they are fine with the status quo.

    Magiccupcake,

    I think you undersell how feature rich steam is for both users and developers.

    They offer community forums, reviews, mods through workshop, cloud saves, automatic controller support, openish vr ecosystem (epic cant even do vr, if you buy a vr game you likely need to use steamvr anyway), broad payment and currency options, regional pricing and guidelines, remote play, and more I’m sure.

    This is much more feature rich than even console platforms, so I think the 30% fee is justified.

    And they do this all without really locking down their ecosystem.

    bogdugg,
    @bogdugg@sh.itjust.works avatar

    I don’t dispute they provide value, but why 30%? Why not 35? Or 25? or 80? or 3? or 29? I don’t know.

    I’m curious, how much of that 30% do you think feeds back into making Steam better and keeping it running?

    Zorque,

    Probably more than a public company, that has to pay dividends and prove worth every quarter.

    DrQuint, (edited )

    but why 30%, why not

    To which the response is: I don’t care. I would have paid the same amount of money for games no matter which of the stupid funny numbers you picked out.

    The beginning and end of how much one should care is “are the devs happy with it? Is that the standard for digital stores as well?”. And the answer to both is Yes, so the concerns are abated.

    If it opens them to driven out of the market by a more generous competitor: Cool. But that alone doesn’t impact me, the costumer. The generous competitor needs to do more. And you know, they know that. That’s why Tim gave me so many free games.

    No you wouldn’t.

    Immortals of Aveum cost 70 monetary-whatevers and killed its studio and no one commented on it. It would have cost 60 whatevers two years ago and still would have killed its studio. But if they did 70, they would have torpedoed that price point in the news circles as a death sentence. They only had the gall because literally no one dared release a game for 70 till Activision did it and others like Sony and Nintendo followed along.

    Steams share has zero impact on my wallet. The market is dictated by things way more arbitrary. Everyone with brain knows this.

    bogdugg, (edited )
    @bogdugg@sh.itjust.works avatar

    “are the devs happy with it? Is that the standard for digital stores as well?”. And the answer to both is Yes

    I fully disagree. On the first point, do developers accept it? Sure. That does not at all mean they are happy about it. Money is tight for games, and I guarantee you every developer would much prefer to take a bigger piece of the pie.

    To your second point, it is the standard but it is not universal. Epic Games Store takes 12%. Itch.io defaults to 10%. Google Play Store takes 15% on the first $1 million in revenue.

    But that alone doesn’t impact me, the consumer.

    I don’t believe this is entirely true. The more cash flow developers have, the more stable they are as companies, and the more able they are to put out good games. You are indirectly impacted because a larger tax on developers means fewer, or lower quality, games that get released.

    Steams share has zero impact on my wallet.

    Disagree, unless you exclusively play AAA.

    Edit: Actually I’ve changed my mind on this. I mostly agree the percentage cut doesn’t affect the optimal price point.

    bionicjoey,

    Don’t forget how far they’ve advanced Linux gaming and hardware

    rambaroo,

    Why would developers care about steams “features”? That’s Valve’s problem, not theirs. 30% is fucking highway robbery for a distributor. The only reason they get away with it is because they’re a monopoly and devs have no choice but to publish games there. It’s crazy that you can’t see that.

    ryathal,

    Developers care about steamworks, making cloud saves, multi-player, matchmaking, voice chat, anti cheat, drm, microtransactions, user authentication, and more significantly easier than doing it yourself, it’s also basically free to use where many alternatives only support some features for significant fees.

    woelkchen,
    @woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

    30% is fucking highway robbery for a distributor. The only reason they get away with it is because they’re a monopoly and devs have no choice but to publish games there.

    googles “epic games exclusives”

    “no choice”… huh…

    Kecessa, (edited )

    A (private) monopoly or virtual monopoly is always bad for consumers.

    dudewitbow,

    So, users get a feature-rich distribution platform, and developers (and by extension users) pay a tax to access those users. So the question is, how fair is that tax, and what effect does that tax have on the games that get made? Your view on that is going to depend on what you want from Steam, but more relevant I think is how much Steam costs to operate. How much of that 30% cut feeds back into Steam? My guess is not much; though I could be wrong.

    But anyway, let’s imagine you took away half the 30% cut. Where does that money go? Well, one of two places: either your pocket, or the developers (or publishers) pocket (depending on how the change affects pricing). The benefits to your pocket are obvious, but what if developers just charge the same price? Well, as far as I’m aware, a lot of games are just not profitable - I read somewhere that for every 10 games, 7 fail, 2 break even, and 1 is a huge success - so my personal view is that this is an industry where developers need all the help they can get. If that extra 15% helps them stay afloat long enough to put out the next thing without selling their soul to Microsoft or Sony or whoever is buying up companies these days, and Steam isn’t severely negatively impacted, I’d call that a win.

    Would you claim that devs who also port their game to console are guilty as the consoles also take 30% cut? The entire console scene is basically what Valve is doing, except valve decides to compete on an open platform instead of a walled garden.

    bogdugg,
    @bogdugg@sh.itjust.works avatar

    The consoles justify the amount they take more because they are selling hardware at a loss to bring in users, so as a developer, you are seeing direct, tangible, and ongoing benefits to giving the manufacturers a cut. Every console cycle, there is renewed investment in the ecosystem to keep users interested.

    For digital platforms, the continued investment in the platform itself is both less tangible, and I would wager less overall (though we can’t know this for Steam because we don’t have access to numbers like that). The longer Steam continues as a platform, the more true this is, unless you believe that Steam will continue to improve at the same rate. I don’t see my interaction with Steam being much different 5 years from now as it is today, so it is less obvious to me that such at steep rate is justified.

    Like, imagine they “perfected” Steam. They made all the features users could ever want, and there becomes no reason to make any more changes. Should they keep charging the same rate? Or, maybe a better way to frame it, would be that rather than investing some of that 30% rate into improving the platform, they invest in developers themselves to make better products, because it’s the only place left to make the platform better than it was before. This would be equivalent to just lowering the rate across the board, in my opinion.

    dudewitbow,

    Not all consoles sell at a loss. Nintendo outright sells for profit, and the ones that didnt are the WiiU and thr Virtual Boy, and I don’t have to remind you how those sold.

    And we are also at an age where even Valve is in the console space. They sell the steamdeck at a severely lower price point compared to its competion.

    Look at the ROG Ally, Lenovo Legion Go, Aya Neos entire catelog, GPD Win 4, Ayn Loki and a bunch more.

    The argument about consoles selling it at subsidized price is justifyable means your saying Valve is in the right to given they are now in that market.

    bogdugg,
    @bogdugg@sh.itjust.works avatar

    This is an interesting perspective, and gave me something to think about!

    I don’t think the Steam Deck is quite there in terms of adoption to justify an across the board tax. The order of operations is kind of reversed, where Steam is reinvesting money made from previous sales towards R&D and Hardware ambitions, rather than using the Steam Deck to bring in users. But if you’re developer that benefits from the Steam Deck’s existence, or saw a sales bump from Steam Deck sales, or some other benefit like that, I agree it’s a pretty good trade-off in that case.

    Nintendo is a bit different because they sort of focus on their own thing and everyone else is secondary. Something like 80% of software sales for Nintendo platforms are first party, so it’s mostly a Nintendo machine. Frankly, I think they should take less of a cut. Indies do really well on Nintendo though. They have a kind of pseudo-monopoly of a younger casual gamer demographic, and they maintain that user base by putting out great software. It is an interesting counterpoint though.

    stillwater,

    Retail stores get a 30% cut from a game sale. Console manufacturers get a further $10 in licensing fees from that sale price, on top of the retail fee. That license cost is what goes to closing that loss leading pricing of the consoles. The retail fee they can charge through their digital storefronts is new to them but only helps them pay down their gap quicker, but they are also still taking that further $10 of licensing on top of the 30%.

    That’s why some PC games are $10 cheaper than their console versions.

    bogdugg,
    @bogdugg@sh.itjust.works avatar

    Is there a source for the $10 fee for digital releases? I’d love to read more about it, had trouble finding it.

    nanoUFO,
    @nanoUFO@sh.itjust.works avatar

    They are a monopoly because they…provide the best most fair platform. Also why would linux users support ubisoft or epic.

    Kecessa,

    Most fair? 🤔 Epic’s cut on the sale is lower than Valve’s…

    Zorque,

    And yet they charge the same amount...

    Seems they use that as a way to get developers to join them, then guilt consumers into using their less useful platform.

    Kecessa,

    The reason it’s the same price on Steam and Epic is that Steam prevents the sale on their platform if the game is sold for cheaper on other platforms…

    I would also gladly increase the developer’s profit instead of the platform’s profit if the price is the same on both as I don’t use all the extra crap that Steam comes with…

    EveningNewbs,

    Games that are Epic exclusive aren’t cheaper either. This is a nonsense argument.

    Kecessa, (edited )

    Oh if you’re talking about exclusives then pricing is all over the place because they have exclusive in all categories (AAA to indie)…

    There’s also more than them in the balance to determine the price at which games sell, 2K games won’t sell the new Borderlands for 60$ while other AAA titles are selling for 70$, they still need to maximise profit and if the market has determined that 70$ is a fair price then so be it.

    Anyway I don’t understand why you wouldn’t want the devs to make more money so they’re able to produce more games instead of the launcher company making more money so they can develop “trading cards” as a way to make even more money.

    hedgehog,

    Do you have a source for that claim that doesn’t reference the sale of Steam keys specifically?

    Kecessa,
    hedgehog,

    Your best sources are a tweet by a competitor and a 2.5 year old lawsuit filed because of that tweet? Excuse me for maintaining my skepticism.

    Kecessa,

    Is a lawsuit by Wolfire game more credible?

    arstechnica.com/…/judge-brings-dismissed-steam-an…

    hedgehog,

    Yes, that’s much more credible - thank you for sharing that. This part in particular is concerning:

    The ruling makes particular note of “a Steam account manager [who] informed Plaintiff Wolfire that ‘it would delist any games available for sale at a lower price elsewhere, whether or not using Steam keys [emphasis in original complaint].’” The amended suit also alleges that “this experience is not unique to Wolfire,” which could factor into the developer’s proposed class-action complaint.

    I wasn’t able to find any instances of Steam actually de-listing a game because it was listed cheaper elsewhere, but a credible threat to do so is almost as bad (possibly worse, really, since such a threat hints that Steam might have used other underhanded tactics when dealing with game devs). I wasn’t able to find any more recent news on the case, but hopefully we’ll learn if the issue was that particular Account Manager + lack of oversight or something more.

    Paradoxvoid,
    @Paradoxvoid@aussie.zone avatar

    Ironically this is actually an example of Valve using its dominant marketshare to suppress rivals - Steam’s ToS require devs to have equivalent pricing across all storefronts if they want to sell on Steam at all, so making it harder for cheaper storefront cuts to translate to lower prices to consumers, who might otherwise move to a different storefront.

    Devs aren’t going to drop Steam as a store, so they’re stuck.

    Aosih,

    It’s not ideal, but I’d say the reason they require equivalent pricing is, so that people don’t just use Steam as a marketing platform, while diverting all sales to their personal website where they sell the game for $X cheaper.

    Paradoxvoid,
    @Paradoxvoid@aussie.zone avatar

    Yeah I do understand the reasoning and honestly can’t fault them for it - they are a for-profit company after all.

    Doesn’t mean that it’s not a good example of them throwing their weight around (which is admittedly rare).

    DrQuint,

    Plus, it only applies to base price, not sale price. If a platform states “you can have your game on sale 100% of the time”, and a game undercuts Steam that way, Steam wouldn’t do anything about it. Well, they wouldn’t have to anyways, it’s illegal to have goods on sale 100% of the time, but the point is there.

    rambaroo,

    It’s a perfect example of them abusing their position in the market. But since you’re a valve cultist, you make up a bunch of weak excuses for it. If epic or ms did the same thing you’d blow a gasket.

    woelkchen,
    @woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

    Epic exclusives prove that developers are happy skipping Steam entirely.

    hedgehog,

    Do you have a source for that claim that doesn’t reference the sale of Steam keys specifically?

    Honytawk,

    Steam’s “price parity rule” is a policy that ensures that Steam keys cannot be sold on other sites unless the product is also available for purchase on Steam at no higher a price than is offered on any other service or website.

    Ars Technica tries to spin it in favour of Steam, but if you read between the lines it is there:

    arstechnica.com/…/why-lower-platform-fees-dont-le…

    hedgehog,

    Thanks for sharing that!

    Steam’s “price parity rule” is a policy that ensures that Steam keys cannot be sold on other sites unless the product is also available for purchase on Steam at no higher a price than is offered on any other service or website.

    IMO, it’s reasonable to say “If you want to sell Steam keys off Steam, you need to follow our pricing rules,” but it is not reasonable to say “If you want to sell your game, sans keys, off Steam, you have to follow our pricing rules to keep selling on Steam.” You’re talking about the former here, right? Or does that mean that the following situation is prohibited:

    • Your game is listed at $50 on Steam
    • You sell keys from your own site for $50
    • You sell your game directly from your site for $40

    and if so, that the mitigation is to either stop selling Steam keys entirely or to raise the price on your own site to $50?

    That’s somewhere in between the two but I dislike it. I suspect it’s more legally murky, too, like tied selling.

    The article briefly talks about the latter (emphasis mine):

    Wolfire’s David Rosen expanded on that accusation in a recent blog post, saying that Valve threatened to “remove [Wolfire’s game] Overgrowth from Steam if I allowed it to be sold at a lower price anywhere, even from my own website, without Steam keys and without Steam’s DRM.

    However, it also says “Sources close to Valve suggested to Ars that this ‘parity’ rule only applies to the ‘free’ Steam keys publishers can sell on other storefronts and not to Steam-free versions of those games sold on competing platforms. Valve hasn’t responded to a request for comment on this story.” I wonder if the lack of comment was because of Wolfire’s lawsuit?

    I’m also now curious if the reason for Steam saying that was related to the in-between situation I talked about above.

    @Kecessa shared this ArsTechnica article from 2022 that covers an update on that lawsuit - I haven’t seen anything more recent. In it, Wolfire makes the same claim, in court, that they’d already made in their blog post, which was sufficient to convince the judge to re-open their case.

    The ruling [to re-open the case] makes particular note of “a Steam account manager [who] informed Plaintiff Wolfire that ‘it would delist any games available for sale at a lower price elsewhere, whether or not using Steam keys [emphasis in original complaint].’” The amended suit also alleges that “this experience is not unique to Wolfire,” which could factor into the developer’s proposed class-action complaint.

    Hopefully we’ll hear more about that soon.

    Nfntordr,

    Only because EGS is trying to take market share, not because of the goodness of their own hearts.

    rambaroo,

    So what? That’s also the only reason valve supports Linux.

    woelkchen,
    @woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

    And thereby fighting the Windows monopoly.

    Honytawk,

    Which they don’t do out of the goodness of their own hearts either.

    Kecessa,

    Until we have proof that they increase their share of the profit when they reach a certain market share then that’s pure speculation on your part.

    woelkchen,
    @woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

    No, it’s not a monopoly. They aren’t even a gatekeeper as defined recently by the EU.

    The most successful PC games (Minecraft, Fortnite, Roblox) aren’t even on Steam.

    rambaroo,

    That doesn’t mean anything. Jesus Christ these arguments that valve isn’t a monopoly are just so incredibly weak. They’ve created a fucking cult.

    criticalimpact,

    Wrong, the US has antritrust laws and you can bet your bottom dollar that epic would have sued them already if they had any ground to do so.

    woelkchen,
    @woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

    Except it means everything. The EU, not really friendly towards US companies, declared that Valve is not a gatekeeper of digital markets. That means they don’t have a monopoly on PC gaming.

    stillwater,

    If this is an example of an argument why they are one, I can see why more people would come down on the other side.

    Gamey,

    Well, what makes a monopoly is the position in the market, without the obligation to infinite growth that doesn’t have to involve anti-competitive prectices.

    Nfntordr,

    Even if they are considered a ‘monolopy’ it seems like people haven’t thought that we are the ones that have thrown our money at Valve and it is the ONLY reason why they are in the position they’re in now. They offer a fantastic service to the gaming community and Valve is supposed to apologise for that? I’m not aware of any abuses within their own company that has contributed to their success or any anti-competitive behaviour?

    CoderKat,

    It’s definitely not merely a matter of not bothering to make a decent store though. I mean, do you think Epic is held back by not being bothered? The way they pour money into their store, I’d it were easy, they’d have it. And having a decent store isn’t enough. It’s kinda like social media in that you need the crowd effect. People want all their games in one place with integrations like friends, mods, achievements, etc. AFAIK, there’s no open standard for most of these things, so you need a big market share to convince devs to make the change.

    echo64,

    This is literally the most popular opinion.

    GreenMario,

    Yeah. Dusk is an amazing game and the creator is talented as fuck but this is “I like oxygen” levels of unpopular opinion lol

    reddig33,

    Oh, I dunno. Everyone seems to bitch about Apple not wanting to give any leeway to Epic on the App Store. Personally I find Epic ridiculously hypocritical, so I say let them eat dirt.

    echo64,

    This is also the most popular opinion.

    Gamey,

    Everyone likes to shit on Epic so it’s probably not a very unpopular opinion ether but there is a big difference between the App and Play store and Steam, only one of them doesn’t use anti-competiive practices and the other two also force their payment provider which is rather shitty!

    rambaroo,

    Then why are must of the comments arguing against it?

    echo64,

    This post has more upvotes than most of the posts on this server.

    z0rb,

    Valve supports linux gaming! The Steam Deck is awesome and with an even better configuration (or the rumored valve's own new steam machine) this is only getting better. So, only Valve gets my money.

    Aurenkin,

    I buy games pretty much exclusively on Steam because of the Linux support (my gaming PC runs Linux only).

    Hopefully more places follow suit because I believe competition is a good thing but for now it’s Steam all the way pretty much apart from Starsector and until recently Dwarf Fortress.

    darq,
    @darq@kbin.social avatar

    Gamers have gotten quite lucky so far that the company that has been in the position to turn the screws and establish a monopoly has been content to only make gobs of money, instead of trying to make all the money like pretty much every other entertainment industry.

    WolfhunterGer, (edited )

    Yeah, the reason why Valve can do that is that they are not a publicly traded company but a privately owned one. Gabe Newell doesn’t have a fiduciary duty to any shareholders, so they don’t have to squeeze every penny from their users or abuse their quasi monopoly.

    Molecular0079,

    The whole idea of investments always going up is an absurd idea that needs to go. At this point I infinitely prefer a private company over a publicly traded one.

    LwL,

    It’s a bit of an inherent issue sadly, if your goal is to multiply money why would you invest in a company whose profits stay the same over one whose go up? And you have no reason to care if the company eventually dies as a result, you just move your money into the next one.

    And most people investing money will be doing so with the only purpose of multiplying that money, as it’s mostly banks and similar institutions. In theory if the main investors of a company want it to prioritize user experience over profits, the companies’ duty to its shareholders would also be to ensure good user experience. But that’s never going to happen.

    doom_and_gloom,
    @doom_and_gloom@lemmy.ml avatar

    Multiplying your investments is the basis of capitalism. To speak to your point of it being an inherent issue - I find the idea of removing the profit motive from capitalist enterprise to hilariously reactionary. Not because I like capitalism, but because so many people that support capitalism want to “reform” it by ripping its heart out (one artery at a time, at least). I want to rip its heart out for the express intent of killing it - what strange allies we make!

    ColeSloth,

    It’s not even an “idea”. They legally have to do whatever they can to make it go up. It’s idiotic and poisonous.

    joelfromaus,
    @joelfromaus@aussie.zone avatar

    If Gabe ever leaves Valve and the powers that be decide to go public I hope it’s done in a way that gives power to the users instead of faceless investment firms. I don’t even know what that would look like but I fear the day that Valve comes under control of an ex-AAA game company CEO or the like.

    Gamey, (edited )

    I wish something like that existed, once you go public you are obligated to grow and that has limits so you always end up squeezing your users! :/

    ALostInquirer,

    Perhaps a transition to a not-for-profit organization structure might be what folks would prefer? It seems like a potentially better alternative than going public, but I’m not sure how it might work in practice for something like a digital storefront.

    In a weird way, one could almost argue that’s roughly how Valve’s been operating anyway, except I imagine they’ve been lining their pockets more than a not-for-profit organization’s owners/employees do.

    Gamey,

    I bet they make a shit ton of money but they certainly seem to reinvest enough of it too. There is a interesting concept called purpose companies here in Europe but it’s not especially wide spread or planned by regulators so the transition is extremly complicated and expensive. The search engine Ecosia is a relatively well known one, it’s basically a company in self ownership where no one from outside can become CEO and no one can sell or go public, they are obligated to their chosen purpose and that’s where their profits go (in the case of Ecosia that’s planting trees), not sure how it works exactly or if it’s doable in the USA at all tho.

    hedgehog,

    I said this elsewhere but that’s not true. The idea that publicly traded companies have a duty to maximize shareholder value is a myth, and anyone privileged enough to sit on a board of directors likely knows this. See this article for an explanation. Every time a board squeezes a company for short term profits at the cost of long term good will, long term profits, etc., that is because they chose to do so.

    Gamey,

    Well the relation is wrong but it’s a real thing, they have a duty to grow infinitely or the sroxk price will crash and since that’s impossible to achive they essentially have to squeeze their users for short term gains to seem like they still grow sooner or later

    hedgehog,

    it’s a real thing, they have a duty to grow infinitely or the sroxk price will crash

    This isn’t a thing.

    Here’s another article explaining why and how it isn’t a thing, and also why people like you think it is.

    Gamey,

    Honestly, I don’t care to continue this conversation, even the attempt to convince people like you is rather pointless

    hedgehog,

    “People like me” meaning “People who cite their sources and investigating claims before making them?” Yes, I can understand why you might find it difficult to convince “people like me” to believe something that’s trivially shown to be false.

    miss_brainfart,
    @miss_brainfart@lemmy.ml avatar

    Each game on your account represents a share.

    That sounds fun.

    aksdb,

    We should do this in the food industrie. Then I would become a steakholder.

    hedgehog, (edited )

    The idea that publicly traded companies have a duty to maximize shareholder value is a myth, and anyone privileged enough to sit on a board of directors likely knows this. See this article for an explanation. Every time a board squeezes a company for short term profits at the cost of long term good will, long term profits, etc., that is because they chose to do so.

    EDIT: See also This NY Times article. And note that I’m not saying that corporations, board members, etc., aren’t pressured or incentivized to maximize shareholder value - I’m saying that they do not have a legal duty to do so.

    AstridWipenaugh,

    It’s not a myth, it’s called Fiduciary Duty. The board, officers, and executives of a public company have a legal responsibility to put the financial interests and well-being of the company above other personal interests. The article you linked doesn’t deny this, and it also isn’t discussing the legal definition of it. It’s discussing what you might call “toxic fiduciary duty”, or more or less the Ferengi Rules of Acquisition. It’s the idea that profit is the primary motive and should always trump all other considerations.

    Fiduciary duty is important to create a concrete stance against corruption and misuse of the company’s assets for personal gain. But when taken to an extreme, it becomes toxic and has negative consequences for the company. Employee wages are probably the most obvious example. There has to be a balance between underpaying and overpaying. If you chronically underpay, the best employees will seek more gainful employment elsewhere and the company will suffer from a poorly qualified workforce. If you overpay, like 100% revenue share with employees, the company will cease to make a profit and will be unable to function. A balance has to be struck to retain the best talent in order to drive success for the company; that is the point of the article you linked.

    TL;DR extremism is always bad

    (Please don’t mistake this for a pro-capitalism rant, there’s nuance to be had here)

    hedgehog,

    All of that is true, but it doesn’t contradict my point. Fiduciary duty isn’t a duty to maximize shareholder value.

    Jakeroxs,

    It literally is in practice.

    hedgehog,

    It isn’t. If it were, that would mean that in practice, board members act to maximize shareholder value because they are legally obligated to do so, and that simply isn’t true.

    In practice, board members and C-suite employees are incentivized to maximize shareholder value. They are not legally obligated to do so.

    Fiduciary duty is a legal requirement, meaning that if you don’t fulfill your fiduciary duty, you’re liable. But nobody has been successfully sued for not maximizing shareholder value when their actions were in line with the business judgment rule (“made (1) in good faith, (2) with the care that a reasonably prudent person would use, and (3) with the reasonable belief that the director is acting in the best interests of the corporation”). Successful lawsuits regarding breach of fiduciary duty (in the context of corporate law) require the defendant to have acted with gross negligence, in bad faith, or to have had an undisclosed conflict of interest.

    The closest instance of legal precedent that I know of (aside from “” of course) that eBay v. Newmark (Craigslist), which Max Kennerly took as meaning that corporations . In this case, Craigslist was found to have violated their fiduciary duties to eBay because Craigslist, in Max’s words, “tried to protect the frugal, community-centric corporate culture that was a hallmark for their success.”

    Except, if you actually read the case notes, it’s clear that the issue wasn’t that Craigslist wasn’t maximizing their profits, but that they were diluting the percentage of stocked owned and flexibility of selling those stocks of other stockholders. The issue wasn’t that Craigslist wanted to spend half their profits supporting charities or anything like that - no, it was that they were trying to artificially limit, thus directly devaluing, the shares they had already sold. In other words, I agree that this was a case about minority shareholder oppression as opposed to being an edict to maximize profits / shareholder value.

    And other than people threatening legal action, the most recent case we have (other than eBay v. NewMark) in favor of shareholder primacy is 124 years old - Dodge v. Ford. But the opposite is true:

    Shareholder primacy is clearly unenforceable on its own term because the business judgment rule would defeat any claims based on a failure to maximize profit. 40 Corporate managers formulate business strategy. A rule‒sanction is antithetical to the core concept of the business judgment rule. In over one hundred years of corporate law, there is not a case where a state supreme court imposed liability for breach of fiduciary duty on the specific ground that the board, in managing operational matters, failed to maximize shareholder profit, though it made the decision informedly, disinterestedly, and in good faith.41 That case does not exist. In fact, many cases show just the opposite. Courts have held that shareholders cannot challenge a board’s decision on the specific grounds that, for example: the company paid its employees too much; 42 it failed to pursue a profit opportunity;43 it did not maximize the settlement amount in a negotiation;44 it failed to lawfully avoid taxes.45 There are classic textbook cases where courts have rejected attempts of shareholders to interfere with the board’s decisions on the argument that their views of business or strategy would have maximized shareholder value.46

    The belief that a corporation is legally obligated to maximize shareholder value isn’t just wrong; it also:

    Jakeroxs, (edited )

    I said in practice, not in law

    Just pointing out I’m a different person lol

    DLSchichtl,

    Why any company I ever control will NOT be publicly traded. It’s a literal deal with the devil.

    Trainguyrom,

    One of the big reasons many companies go public is it’s naturally a really nice retirement package for the owners of the company. The owners of the company may have put so much time and money into building the company that they don’t have sufficient retirement savings, so by going public they turn a portion of their ownership into a boatload of cash as well as a boatload of wealth that can be leveraged, then simply elect a new CEO, retain their significant voting power on the board so they aren’t entirely abandoning their baby and then peace out

    jtmetcalfe,

    Epic is also private though I agree with your sentiment 100%

    TenderfootGungi,

    Just like I am happy with Apple and Google taking a cut and running their app stores. If these big companies could make their own store, they would. Apple would lose a cut, but that does not affect me as a consumer. What does affect me is a gate keeper keeping terrible practices in check. Making it nearly impossible to cancel a subscription instead of having a handy menu to just turn it off. Having places to put credit cards that are not secure. Collecting personal data nonstop. Etc etc.

    rikudou,
    @rikudou@lemmings.world avatar

    I’m one of the few who actually like the existence of Epic. Like, not necessarily Epic itself, but some serious competition is needed. I personally would’ve loved it if the competition was GOG, but it seems consumers don’t particularly care about ownership, so we have Epic.

    BaroqueInMind,
    @BaroqueInMind@kbin.social avatar

    I personally would’ve loved it if the competition was GOG, but it seems consumers don’t particularly care about ownership

    What the fuck are you saying? Of course consumers care about ownership, otherwise Stadia would be dominating the market, and we can see that it's not.

    Virkkunen,
    @Virkkunen@kbin.social avatar

    Ownership is not why Stadia failed.

    BaroqueInMind, (edited )
    @BaroqueInMind@kbin.social avatar

    If you are trying to argue that ownership was not even a part of the multitude reasons Stadia failed and is off the table, you should seriously need to consider evaluating your critical thinking skills.

    Gamey,

    It wasn’t, it works for Nvidia, people just don’t want to pay for their games twice and that broke Stadias neck…

    stillwater, (edited )

    This was supposed to be the comment where you show why ownership was a major factor in why Stadia failed, not a comment where you huff and puff and complain that something you insist on isn’t being accepted.

    nanoUFO,
    @nanoUFO@sh.itjust.works avatar

    The problem is that all the competition to steam is far far inferior to steam in technology and ideology and future prospects. Steam isn’t a publicly traded company, has features that are pro consumers, is supporting other OS’s and doesn’t have a CEO that is a prick like epic.

    echo64,

    Sure. But what if Gabe newel decided to sell tomorrow. Just wants to retire maybe he’s pretty old. What if Microsoft buys it and you’re left with a monopoly you don’t like. That’s the eventuality of every unhealthy industry.

    nanoUFO, (edited )
    @nanoUFO@sh.itjust.works avatar

    Well it will be a sad day and Ubisoft, Microsoft and Epic competition won’t fix anything if steam goes to shit. Steam is basically the unicorn and once it becomes extinct we won’t get anything half decent to replace it with. Publicly traded companies are the bedrock of unhealthy industries.

    echo64,

    Competition in the marketplace is the only thing that has any chance of saving you when that day comes.

    You are in lucky days today. Tomorrow won’t be so good, but you can choose to support an industry controlled by a monopoly, or you can support an industry with healthy competition.

    I would hope that Gamers aren’t so near sighted, but I’ve been proven wrong over and over again.

    nanoUFO,
    @nanoUFO@sh.itjust.works avatar

    When steam shuts down and we have Ubisoft and Epic to replace it with I’m just moving to itch.io and probably torrenting my steam library if it comes to the worst. Also I might actually stop playing games since steam is pushing proton development forward and without them I have no reason to play or buy anything new. Epic’s shitty CEO has made toxic remarks against linux before and Ubisoft just couldn’t care less. I’ll support a company that supports my interests, epic doesn’t so I don’t simple as.

    CileTheSane,
    @CileTheSane@lemmy.ca avatar

    “Supporting competition” is not a good enough reason to use a shitty service. If I start a service that charges twice as much as Steam and has none of the features would you use it in order to “support competition”?

    If the only reason to purchase from Epic is “they exist” that’s not good enough.

    I will happily avoid Epic’s attempts to be a monopoly now over worrying that Steam might be shitty in the future.

    echo64,

    It’s super weird to me that you guys think epic is trying to be a monopoly. Epic had 0.00001% of the market. In their wildest dreams they might expect to get ten percent.

    woelkchen,
    @woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

    Epic had 0.00001% of the market.

    The numbers for Fortnite, available on EGS but not Steam, tell otherwise.

    CileTheSane,
    @CileTheSane@lemmy.ca avatar

    Just because they aren’t good at it doesn’t mean they aren’t trying very hard to do so, and will clearly be very shitty if they ever achieve it.

    Zorque,

    That would be helpful if they actually tried to be competitive on the same level.

    Unfortunately they're only competing for profit, not as a service. Which is why they're failing.

    Competition bettering service only works if people want to compete to create a better service. That clearly isn't the case.

    leftzero,

    Then we’d go back to sailing the high seas, until a better alternative shows up; as Gabe said, piracy is a service problem.

    Kbin_space_program,

    I feel Steam vs competitors is like how after 1st wave MCU, everyone was jumping on that bandwagon, but instead of putting in the groundwork just skipped ahead, or like the monsters one just abandoned it because of one bad movie.

    Kecessa,

    Epic launches my games, Steam is full of bloat that I never use… 🤷

    Zorque,

    That "bloat" is 99% of the reason people use it.

    Kecessa,

    No, 99% of the reason they use it is that they were first to market, made it mandatory for their first party games that were extremely popular at the time (and even today) and became defacto mandatory for many third party games as it made it simpler to control piracy to just sell through them or include a key in the physical copy and force people to install Steam. The majority of Steam users are casuals that couldn’t care less about their forums, cards, social profiles and so on. It’s the same thing in everything, there’s enthusiasts that think everyone is as crazy as they are about their hobby, the majority are just casual users that will never know/use half of the possibilities available to them because they don’t care.

    rambaroo,

    Lol. You think 99% of people give a shit about forums or Linux support?

    Kecessa,

    I personally don’t include Linux support in the bloat, but forums, social profiles, trading cards, reviews, achievements… Yes, that’s bloat.

    Honytawk,

    Hey!

    Linux has almost a 2% market share on Steam, I have you know!

    So it is only 98% who don’t care.

    Zeus, (edited )

    i would love for steam to have some competition. i will gladly switch over to the first competitor that has

    • a big picture / controller-friendly interface
    • controller configurator that
      • is more powerful than rewasd
      • is editable in the overlay
      • has import/exportable configs (incl. with the community)
      • supports the best controller i’ve ever used, the steam controller
    • cross-platform client
    • cross-platform cloud saves
    • workshop/modding support
    • proper reviews system
    • community page for each game
    • etc.

    and doesn’t

    • buy exclusivity rights to games
      • i don’t mind revenue deals for exclusivity, but buying existing games takes the biscuit
    • actively worsen existing games
      • e.g. removing the impeccable siapi support in rocket league, and making it run on the shitty epic servers so it disconnects all the time

    particularly now that steam has switched over to electron, so the client runs like shit

    i do sometimes use gog because i like their ideology, but they’re missing quite a few from this list. any gog or itch.io games i buy, i inevitably add to steam as a non-steam game. which adds a lot of these handy features, but not all

    unfortunately, until a competitor brings along something new to the table, i’m quite happy to wait and pay more for a game on steam. it just has too many features i can’t give up

    ayaya,
    @ayaya@lemdro.id avatar

    particularly now that steam has switched over to electron, so the client runs like shit

    It uses CEF not Electron, which it has used for over 13 years. This isn’t something they just added. If it’s running slow for you you probably have an issue with hardware acceleration.

    Zeus, (edited )

    It uses CEF not Electron,

    fine. i was simplifying. that wasn’t the main point of my comment. forgive me.

    which it has used for over 13 years. This isn’t something they just added.

    no…?

    you mean that the store has been an embedded browser? in that case yes

    but the whole steam client? has always been vgui, not electron . did you even read the link you sent? just because there is reference to chromium in the commit log doesn’t mean the whole thing’s built in chromium, and just because a programme can render web content also doesn’t mean it’s built in chromium. when firefox switched from xul to html did you go “akshyually, it was always able to render html content so it hasn’t switched at all”

    If it’s running slow for you you probably have an issue with hardware acceleration.

    it’s not just me who has performance issues. at one point it was everyone on linux with an nvidia gpu. which is supposedly fixed (and it’s definitely better) but it’s still unusably slow on both linux and windows. also, so what. “it works on my machine” isn’t a great excuse to ignore the biggest gaming gpu brand, and electron is notoriously non-performant (if my pc can handle playing a video in ffx whilst playing recent 3d games, i think it should also be able to display my list of owned games without stuttering). my point was that i never had issues with vgui, and now i do.


    edit: ah, i’ve just looked through your comment history. i don’t believe anyone who’s not a troll has -10 karma and no negative comments (especially with some comments with >100 points), and i also suspect vote manipulation. i should never have engaged. sorry. i won’t engage any more.

    ayaya,
    @ayaya@lemdro.id avatar

    but the whole steam client? has always been vgui, not electron cef. just because there is reference to chromium in the commit log doesn’t mean the whole thing’s built in chromium.

    The “whole client” hasn’t been VGUI. Yes now every element is CEF but many, many pieces have been CEF for a very long time. “Switched over to Electron” implies it was entirely changed but it’s just using more of the thing it was already using. Those are two different things.

    it’s not just me who has performance issues. at one point it was everyone on linux with an nvidia gpu

    The issue you linked had nothing to do with Steam it was a bug with the Nvidia driver itself. Not sure what that’s supposed to prove.

    my point was that i never had issues with vgui, and now i do.

    And my point is that is not an inherent problem with Steam, that is something specific to your configuration. If it runs fine for other people it can run fine for you. I’m on Arch with an Nvidia GPU. I have zero issues with the performance.

    echo64,

    How is a competitor ever supposed to compete with a feature list like that? It has to come out of the gate with all those things? This is why monopolies exist.

    Zeus, (edited )

    honestly? i kind of agree. but gog spent a lot of dev time revamping their client into "gog galaxy 2.0" just to make it less controller accessible; and the epic client is just unusable

    i would have more sympathy if they were little indie companies. but the itch.io client is better than either. these companies are pouring money into breaking into a market, but not bothering to develop features

    that comment was more an example of why the egs isn’t yet a real competitor than a criticism of any as yet nonexistent competitors

    IWantToFuckSpez, (edited )

    A monopoly is a monopoly. Just because Steam is a good store today doesn’t mean they deserve to hold a monopoly over the pc gaming market. So what happens when Valve has crushed every competitor? Gamers and devs have nowhere to go if Steam turns to shit. Eventually there will be a change of guards at Valve’s C-suite when Gaben retires or is dead. There is a good chance that those new execs will hollow out Steam and extract all the value out of it for their own benefit by screwing over the customers and developers. And they can get away with that if there is no competition. Competition is what keeps Valve in check.

    nanoUFO,
    @nanoUFO@sh.itjust.works avatar

    Ubisoft, Epic etc… have done nothing to make the market better or make it more healthy. Epic is even more anti competitive than it’s competition.

    IWantToFuckSpez, (edited )

    Doesn’t matter. It’s still competition. They motivate Valve to create a better store and keep it that way. Since that is Valve’s unique selling point and what distinguishes them from the competition. Therefore I believe devs should make their games available on every storefront. Not just the best one, to give customers a choice.

    nanoUFO,
    @nanoUFO@sh.itjust.works avatar

    Steam was great before epic and has been adding killer features since before egs came along. EGS tactics to win over steam users is to be anti competitive…

    IWantToFuckSpez,

    Ok but competition is always good for the customer even when the competitors are shit.

    CileTheSane,
    @CileTheSane@lemmy.ca avatar

    Ok, but as a consumer I’m fine with the shit competitor existing but I’m not going to use it.

    NightOwl, (edited )

    Like Walmart coming into a town to compete with the stores already there and then putting them out of business? Then moving onto the next town to compete again?

    nanoUFO, (edited )
    @nanoUFO@sh.itjust.works avatar

    competition is good when the rest of the competition is able or good. EGS is so shit it has to buy exclusives and give out free games and it still doesn’t work. There has to be some equality in quality to have any chance of making steam better otherwise they just exist to make anti competitive moves, what is steam supposed to do? Also pay for exclusives?

    Kolanaki, (edited )
    !deleted6508 avatar

    If that was true, then why complain about Valve’s “monopoly?” It has competition. The competition is just shit.

    leftzero,

    When their launcher is literal malware or they engage in anti-consumer practices like exclusives, no, they are not good for the customer.

    (Not that any publicly traded company can be good for the customer, mind; by definition they can only be good for the shareholders; any benefit they might accidentally provide to the customer or to society is an inefficiency that will eventually be corrected through enshittification. The only reason Valve isn’t entirely harmful is that they aren’t publicly traded yet.)

    XLRV,
    @XLRV@lemmy.ml avatar

    Tell that to Epic.

    stillwater,

    Doesn’t matter. It’s still competition. They motivate Valve to create a better store and keep it that way.

    Explain. What specific examples can you point to regarding the UPlay store that forced Steam to improve something?

    Kolanaki, (edited )
    !deleted6508 avatar

    The only thing Valve has done with Steam that apparently is anti-competitive, is actually having a decent product with good features and no one else is capable of actually delivering parity with it to be a viable competitor.

    A natural monopoly is a far cry from one built through anti-competitive practices, and easily toppled by competent competitors.

    Perhaps if Valve’s competition was competent, there would be better options.

    IWantToFuckSpez,

    True. But Google became the number one search engine by creating a better product and basically got a natural monopoly. And now look what kind of monster the company has become.

    Just because Steam is a good store today doesn’t mean it will stay that way in the future. Therefore I rather not see Steam be the only game store left in the pc gaming space.

    CileTheSane,
    @CileTheSane@lemmy.ca avatar

    But Epic is a shitty store today. I’m not going to use it out of fear the Steam might become a shitty store tomorrow.

    IWantToFuckSpez,

    That’s fine, neither do I. Because as a customer we have a choice. But we only have that choice if devs make their games available on all stores.

    CileTheSane,
    @CileTheSane@lemmy.ca avatar

    Epic has in the past declined hosting games that don’t agree to exclusivity, so it’s not always the dev’s choice.

    Kbin_space_program, (edited )

    Well no. Google used to steal results from other search engines initially.v And then suppressed search results for competing products for at least the last 20 years.

    rambaroo,

    deleted_by_moderator

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  • Kolanaki, (edited )
    !deleted6508 avatar

    Then get mad at the weak-ass competition. Start a fire under their asses to make something that is actually just as good, if not better.

    Punishing the one good product for being good is just gonna lead to there being no good products and only shitty ones just as much as your slippery-slope scenario. 🤦‍♂️

    conciselyverbose,

    But they haven't crushed any other competitor through any mechanism but having a dramatically better product.

    They don't force you to be exclusive to be on steam. They don't force you to implement any of their Steam stuff. They are very permissive unless you do shit that potentially exposes them to liability down the road, like the NFT nonsense.

    And they let you generate keys for literally free to sell on other stores.

    All their stuff companies use is because it's things customers value.

    Kbin_space_program, (edited )

    When they started, they did used to force you to use products edit: aside from their own games(fair cop), some 3rd party games like Lost Planet also required it.

    Certain games, and not just valve games, you'd buy in a store and the disc would force you to install and create a steam account to play the single player offline game.

    conciselyverbose,

    They're a distribution mechanism. If you buy a Steam game you need Steam. Allowing developers to require Steam to play their game is not anticompetitive or in any way unethical.

    They didn't force any developer who wanted to sell games on Steam to only sell games on Steam. That's what would be anticompetitive and abusing their market position. Games choosing to only distribute through Steam because there's no other storefront that wouldn't be a worse value if it was free isn't Steam doing something wrong.

    Kbin_space_program, (edited )

    My point is that they did initially to force usage. I'll edit the post with the game name when I get home.

    Edit: Lost Planet. It had a disc but required you to sign up for and use steam to play it.

    conciselyverbose,

    A publisher only distributing through Steam when it does things others don't isn't forcing usage.

    Forcing usage is requiring developers to only distribute through Steam.

    There is no scenario where the first is wrong, and there is no scenario where the second is OK.

    Zorque,

    Looks like it was a console exclusive before it released on Steam, if you're talking about Lost Planet: Extreme Condition (which is the only one I can find by that name).

    Do you have more information about the release? Or perhaps it's a different game?

    stillwater, (edited )

    They didn’t force any game to use Steamworks, developers and publishers chose to use it because it offered a lot of good middleware. And of course it requires Steam to use Steamworks.

    This is a very soft idea of “force”.

    Blizzard,

    This is a great opportunity to mention 15th Anniversary of GOG.

    lambda,
    @lambda@programming.dev avatar

    If only they supported Linux better, or really like at all… I know you can grab the files and install without DRM. But, the whole lack of a client makes it a nuisance to use. I used to buy everything on GOG when possible. Since I got a Steam Deck that’s changed. I shouldn’t have to use Heroic Launcher IMO…

    bouh,

    Why shouldn’t you have to use heroic launcher or lutris? The whole point of drm free is that you don’t need a specific launcher connected to Internet.

    NightOwl,

    Yet, ease of access is what appeals to the average consumer which leads to preferring steam for Linux for the same reason people get hardware restricted consoles. If a company wants to appeal and expand their market making themselves more accessible is how they do it. Otherwise alternative is to be an overlooked option.

    Gamey,

    Not directly related but this Gabe quote still seems somewhat fitting: “Piracy is almost always a service problem and not a pricing problem”

    NightOwl,

    Yeah, had Valve tried to push Linux again without trying to make it accessible for the average user it would have flopped like the Steam machine. Or at the very least users would have tossed Linux for Windows. Accessibility is very important, and technical users should not be looked to as guides on what is acceptable for the masses.

    lambda,
    @lambda@programming.dev avatar

    Because they should be able to make a launcher that works. The Windows GOG launcher (GOG Galaxy) is a joke. They want to make one launcher to rule them all but it struggles with almost every one. I have a Windows computer for games that require it (Valorant mostly for me) and even on PC I use Heroic. I don’t want crazy features. I just want an officially supported GOG client that works well on Linux and Windows.

    bouh,

    Galaxy works fine on windows. It’s far more stable than steam btw.

    In the meantime heroic or lutris work very well. So why is there even a need for something else? I’d argue it’s better if a company don’t hold your game hostage for you to play them.

    ECB,

    “It’s far more stable than steam btw.”

    I’ll admit I’ve only used Linux for the past 5-6 years, but I think the last time steam crashed for me was almost a decade ago or something? Is it not stable on windows anymore?

    DualPad,
    @DualPad@lemmy.one avatar

    It is stable.

    bouh,

    It does crash regularly, or it stops working and you need to restart it, and it always did this kind of thing. The obnoxious “I need to update before you’re allowed to play” is hardly a selling feature. The videos and the adds are both obnoxious and intensive on resources.

    Galaxy has its ups and downs, but overall I feel its lighter and much more responsive. The interface is much less cluttered, much more logical and clear. And it’s not a fucking drm.

    I thank vavle for what did for Linux gaming. Proton is brilliant and incredibly useful and valuable. But I also despise them for steam being litteraly a DRM. So I will forgive cdpr if they need time to develop galaxy on Linux and I’ll use lutris and heroic game launcher in the meantime.

    aBundleOfFerrets,

    It is trivial to disable all the video content (and some more) on steam if you happen to be on low-end hardware that needs that (or just if you don’t like it, really)

    bouh,

    I’m not on low end hardware.

    aBundleOfFerrets,

    I explicitly addresed that possibilty in my comment.

    woelkchen,
    @woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

    It does crash regularly, or it stops working and you need to restart it, and it always did this kind of thing.

    Then you use it wrong. No idea how that’s possible but I run Steam on Windows, macOS, and Linux and except very early in the life cycle of the Steam Deck, I can’t remember Steam ever crashing on me in the last 10 or so years.

    bouh,

    “you use it wrong”… Of course… It cannot possibly be the fault of a shitty software and it must be me…

    woelkchen,
    @woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

    It cannot possibly be the fault of a shitty software and it must be me…

    If you were correct, there’d be widespread reports of crashes. While no software is always free of bugs, if a piece of software is crashing for you all the time and hardy for everybody else, it’s the logical conclusion that the underlying problem is on your side, probably by installing unstable drivers.

    bouh,

    Hahaha like people will fill a bug report everytime a software crash… I wonder whether you’re delusional or blinded by your faith into this piece if shit of a software.

    lambda,
    @lambda@programming.dev avatar

    I have the exact opposite experience as you. I have never once seen steam crash. My steam account is now 9 years old. I was absolutely stoked when I saw GOG Galaxy was trying to handle not only GOG games but games from other platforms as well. But my experience with that has been so bad. It’s fine for GOG games, but I’d much rather just add all my games into steam at this point. So as for stability, I don’t see any way that GOG Galaxy could ever beat Steam.

    For Linux support, Steam is a DRM which is a detractor. But with all they’ve done with proton, steam input, steam deck OS… I’d say that Steam is definitely doing more for the Linux ecosystem than GOG.

    bouh,

    Steam has been working on the steam deck for how long now? 5? 10 years? Gog has that much time to catch up.

    And as I said, I don’t deny the role steam played and is still playing for Linux gaming. But it’s still a drm. And that’s something I simply cannot ignore.

    I do use steam mind you. But I’ll use and support gog everytime I can. If steam did the most for Linux, gog did and still do the most for players.

    rambaroo,

    Because consumers are lazy and don’t care about ownership.

    nicman24,

    I d trust a privately own company with Gabe as the head than the asshats that proliferated micro transactions and shitty always online DRM for single player games.

    dan,

    But Steam doesn’t have a monopoly. There’s Epic and GOG and whatever Origin’s called now and probably others. They’re all free to exist, Valve doesn’t do anything to stifle competition, and even lets other companies sell games that start their launcher from Steam.

    The only thing you have to lose by using a different system is that it’s probably not as good.

    All they’ve done is produce a really fucking exemplary product and it’s become really popular because it’s honestly just good. The second it stops being good or Valve stop being awesome there’s plenty of alternative ways to buy games that I’m sure will be there to replace it.

    But for now… it’s pretty good.

    PM_ME_FEET_PICS,

    Steam is a boggy garbage client and the company was solely responsible for the 50 to 60 USD price hike on the PC market.

    Valve can get fucked. Hopefully the class action makes them rethink their choices and they sell to Microsoft.

    woelkchen,
    @woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

    Valve does not mandate any prices.

    PM_ME_FEET_PICS,

    deleted_by_moderator

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  • Snowpix,
    @Snowpix@lemmy.ca avatar

    “I have no argument, so I’ll just insult them instead. That’ll show them”

    Honytawk,

    Valve does mandate the price cut they take

    jikel,

    You forgot /s

    theragu40,

    Solely responsible? Lol

    When did we start blaming one private company for inflation? Games should cost $100 or more right now if they were increasing linearly over time.

    NightOwl,

    You want Microsoft to own everything? What?

    sugar_in_your_tea,

    Yeah, no.

    And Valve is perhaps the best PC store since they have continually pushed PC gaming forward, for example:

    • Valve Index - still one of the best, if not the best, VR headset out there; it made VR a lot more interesting
    • Steam Controller - didn’t make as big of a spash as they wanted, but it was really innovative and lead to…
    • Steam Deck - yeah, they weren’t first, but it’s affordable and made a big enough splash to get big studios to care; now we have a lot more options as well for handheld PC gaming

    Not to mention their Linux support, awesome customer support, free dev keys, and Steam Link app. What did other stores do?

    • GOG - DRM-free is great! But that’s about it.
    • EGS - free games and lower store fee are cool
    • Xbox Game Pass - pretty good for users, but it’s troubling long term, and it only works on Windows
    • everything else - can’t think of anything special here

    So no, I don’t think Valve is bad in any way. Quite the opposite, they’re the best behaved games store on PC.

    Edgelord_Of_Tomorrow,

    GOG Galaxy is actually amazing in what it accomplishes, GOG just don’t have the resources to make it frictionless.

    Gamepass is probably the main competition for Steam at this point. Publishers have been busting to make games run on the cloud, it’s the ultimate DRM, the ultimate goal of the erosion of ownership.

    There will be a time where there is a push towards partial-cloud gaming and then fully cloud gaming, and it will be hard for PC gaming to compete in the mainstream when you buy an Xbox dongle for $50 and game as soon as you plug it in. That’s the real threat to Valve.

    sugar_in_your_tea,

    GOG just don’t have the resources to make it frictionless

    They had enough budget to make Cyberpunk 2077 and The Witcher 3, I think they can handle making a decent desktop client. They just don’t prioritize it.

    But yeah, subscription and cloud gaming is where the industry wants to go, and I sincerely hope they don’t succeed.

    Edgelord_Of_Tomorrow,

    GOG loses money for CDPR

    sugar_in_your_tea,

    Then they’re either not meeting the needs of potential customers or not finding new customers.

    For me personally, I would buy more from them if they supported Linux with GOG Galaxy. I would but a lot more from them if GOG Galaxy had a good experience on Steam Deck. I can’t speak for anyone else, but that’s my price, and apparently it’s the most upvoted feature request for GOG Galaxy.

    I didn’t have a Steam account until they made a Linux client (they released in 2012, I made my Steam account in 2013). I bought a few Linux native games here and there, and when they launched Proton in 2018, I bought a lot more games. Before that, I mostly bought games directly from indie devs (Minecraft, Factorio, etc), or tried my luck buying Windows games and running them through WINE (e.g. Starcraft 2).

    That’s my price. If they want me as a customer, they need first class Linux support. That’s why Steam gets my money, and GOG could win my business by offering DRM-free games on top. But to me, a Linux desktop client is more important than DRM-free, so that’s why Steam gets my money.

    PM_ME_FEET_PICS,

    The Valve Index is the least popular VR option and doesn’t rank near the top of VR headsets. Still being beat out by entry level Oculus.

    The Steam controller was poorly made flop and has been discontinued. The vast majority of reviews put the controller well below the Xbox controller, which was already PC compatible.

    Steam Deck is very expensive and has a very poor battery life. Making the handheld cable tethered. It also went against its open promise by including locked down proprietary software.

    Steams customer support ranks the third worst of all top level game stores. Just above Ubisoft and Blizzard.

    You mention their Linux support yet the majority of games are yet to be supported and plenty of game will never be supported due to their nature or inclusion of anti-cheat. The only thing Valve has done was release the Steam Client to Linux.

    Steam popularized gambling for children and continue to be one of 2 PC companies that continue to do so.

    sugar_in_your_tea,

    Oculus

    Valve’s goal isn’t to sell a lot of headsets, but to show what’s possible with high quality VR and encourage more VR games and headsets. Valve’s ultimate goal here is to sell more VR games.

    Oculus wants to sell a lot of headsets so they can push some kind of SM interaction and profit from having lots of ads. The priority there is adoption, not quality or compatibility.

    Steam Controller was poorly made

    No, it was well made, it just wasn’t popular. And again, it wasn’t their goal to sell a ton of them.

    The goal was to design a flexible controller to build out their controller API and give an option for a decent desktop mouse replacement for a PC “console” format (i.e. Steam Machine). I think they succeeded at that, but the market wasn’t interested, probably because Steam Machines didn’t go anywhere. It was never intended to replace existing controllers, but to complement them.

    Steam Deck is very expensive

    It’s $400, which is really competitive. Direct competitors like the AYANEO cost ~$1k twice as much, or even more. The Switch cost $300 at launch (OLED is $350, even today) and wasn’t even competitive with current console hardware at launch, while the Steam Deck is competitive with both price and hardware.

    And it’s not cable tethered. I get a few hours of battery life as long as I’m not playing the most heavy games. Most of what I play are older AAA games and newer indie titles, and I get 3-5 hours of battery life, which is longer than my play sessions anyway. If I switch to a modern AAA titles, it’s like 1-2 hours, which is still enough for most play sessions.

    Their goal, again, isn’t to sell a ton and corner the PC handheld market, it’s to make PC handhelds popular so there’s more demand, thus more competition, and thus more game sales. They also want to show what’s possible with a Linux-based PC, so there’s a credible alternative to Microsoft (and most games seem to be playable, check out ProtonDB for a larger picture than just Steam’s official stamp; look at Proton DB medals, 77% are Gold or Platinum, which usually refers to “playable” and “verified” accordingly).

    Steam’s customer support

    You claim it’s worse, but you don’t give examples of services that are better. Here are some examples of worse customer service:

    • Nintendo estore - no returns
    • PlayStation store - no returns if you have started to download it, unless it’s faulty (e.g. Cyberpunk 2077), and even then you have 14 days
    • Xbox - within 14 days and don’t have “a significant amount of playtime”

    And Steam’s policy is 14 days and <2 hours playtime (so the same or better than above), yet there are countless examples of refunds being issued being both the time and playtime limit, provided you don’t abuse it.

    I’m not going to go through other examples because I believe I’ve proven my point, so now it’s your turn: give specific examples of other stores having better customer service than Steam.

    PM_ME_FEET_PICS,

    Refunds are your only metric for customers service? Get fucked.

    sugar_in_your_tea,

    No, they’re just one example, and perhaps the most clearly documented one, and IMO the most important one (i.e. the one that most users will need to use).

    If you want to discuss another metric, then please do so.

    woelkchen,
    @woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

    The only thing Valve has done was release the Steam Client to Linux.

    *countless improvements Valve engineers have made to the the Mesa OpenGL and Vulkan drivers as well as to the kernel graphics driver components. Not just to the AMD graphics drivers for benefiting the Steam Deck’s hardware but also to Zink OpenGL-on-Vulkan and then other common infrastructure. But in this area of the Linux graphics driver support, Valve’s contributions and those of their partners have been incredibly beneficial to the Linux desktop ecosystem even outside gaming. *

    www.phoronix.com/…/Valve-Upstream-Everything-OSS

    harpuajim,

    Just want to say that as a VR enthusiast, the Index is nowhere near the top of the list of VR headsets.

    sugar_in_your_tea,

    I guess that depends on your priorities. It has a competitive resolution and frame rate, is a bit heavy, has fantastic controllers, and has Linux compatibility. It’s also expensive and is best to pair with high end hardware.

    So if you’re looking for Linux support (like me), it’s pretty much your only option, unless you’re willing to buy used or accept a lot of compromises. If you’re looking for cheap, lightweight, or compatible with lower end hardware, it’s not going to score well.

    But on the whole, outside of pricing, it does a good job in almost every category. If money is no object, the Index is one of the best.

    Gamey,

    The position makes a monopoly so I would say they are but they remain the good guys because they don’t engage in anti-competitive practices, you can have a monopoly wven if you don’t abuse it.

    CoderKat,

    Monopolies aren’t based on the mere existence of competition. It’s based on power and market share. Eg, Chrome has a monopoly. Firefox, Safari, and a few niche browsers exist. But Chrome is the utter vast majority of the market and has pretty much all the power on dictating web standards as a result.

    Microsoft had competitors when they got sued for their IE + Windows monopoly. But they had an utterly massive amount of the market share and used that to push their own browser.

    TheBlue22,

    Steam doesn’t have a monopoly, other platforms are just shit.

    Missing features, badly made features, fucking spyware, some barely working at all (I am looking at you, ubisoft)

    Perhaps if the other platforms tried a little bit, they would actually be a competition.

    Gamey,

    The position makes a monopoly, not the reason…

    TheBlue22,

    A monopoly is defined as a single seller or producer that excludes competition from providing the same product

    By this definition, Epic games would be a monopoly with its exclusives.

    Gamey,

    That’s not at all what a monopoly is, it’s simply the absence of competition aka the market position. You don’t have to engage in anti-competitive practices to havw a monopoly, I don’t get why that’s so hard to understand for many here…

    MomoTimeToDie,

    deleted_by_author

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  • Gamey,

    Other games aren’t a competition for a platform like Steam, that’s a different market. Steam has a monopoly because they have a extremely dominant position without real competition in their sector, they don’t have to engage in anti-competitive practices against games outside of steam to have that…

    MomoTimeToDie,

    deleted_by_author

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  • Gamey,

    Fuck, this is so stupid it’s hard to even responde… Steam has a monopoly on game distribution but Minecraft isn’t a Steam competitor just like Fortnite isn’t a Play Store competitor! I am done with this thread, it’s frustrating to try and explain so many people such basic things if they don’t want to hear them!

    Paradoxvoid,
    @Paradoxvoid@aussie.zone avatar

    People saying Steam doesn’t have a monopoly because other stores exist, is the same as saying Microsoft doesn’t have a monopoly on PC Gaming because Mac and Linux exist. Technically true, but ultimately meaningless because its their market power that determines a monopoly, not whether there are other niche players.

    While Valve and Steam have generally been a good player, and currently do offer the best product, they still wield an ungodly amount of influence over the PC gaming market space.

    Epic is chasing that because they really want what Valve has, though no doubt they plan to speedrun the enshittification process as soon as they think it safe.

    rtxn,

    When people say Valve doesn’t have a monopoly, they usually mean they don’t engage in anti-competitive practices (like making exclusivity a condition for publishing on their store, cough cough).

    Actually, Valve’s recent moves represent what free market capitalism should be about - when competing stores started to appear, they instead made massive contributions to Linux gaming and appealed to right-to-repair advocates with the Steam Deck. Now both of those demographics are suckling on Gaben’s teats, myself included.

    Gamey,

    I hate DRM but really like Steam, they put in a shit ton of work to achive that! It’s certainly a monopoly but I think one of the biggest differences is that it’s not a publically tradet company so they don’t have to chase that infinite growth many very influencial idiots don’t see any issue with and there for aren’t willing to destroy everything for short term gains.

    rena_ch,

    Despite not having pressure from shareholders Valve pioneered or at least popularized and normalized many of the worst practices in videogame industry designed to milk players dry: microtransactions, battle passe, loot boxes, real money gambling, you name it, Valve has it

    Gamey,

    True, their games have quite a few very questionable mechanics!

    HidingCat,

    Capitalism and a free economy are good when it's serving customers by making the best product or service possible, while balancing that with paying labour to make that happen.

    The problem is that nowadays, there's a third party to this for the megacorps: Shareholders, which is where the enshittification begins.

    Valve is a private company, so it is not beholden to any external shareholders, which is why it's been able to chart its own course. Still, I do worry what will happen when Gabe steps down.

    Poob,

    Even when capitalism serves customers well, it still takes the work of people who make things, and gives it to people who own things

    Jakeroxs,

    What does that have to do with Valve?

    Poob,

    Are you lost? I’m responding to the previous comment

    Jakeroxs,

    Who was replying to someone talking about Valve

    Poob,

    And benevolent capitalism

    Jakeroxs,

    I just don’t think that’s the case with Valve, they work on steam and add new features consistently, it’s not like they’re providing no value for the cut they take.

    I get where you’re coming from though and way too many companies get away with that kind of situation. Just what capitalism often gives us :/

    Poob,

    I’m not talking about Valve giving things back to us. I’m talking about the fact the owners of the company get money simply by owning the company. They take money they didn’t work for. Even if the company isn’t manipulative or scummy, they’re enriching people who don’t deserve it.

    Jakeroxs,

    Generally companies do provide a service of some sort, the problem is that the higher ups who generally do less actual “work” rake in way way more then the average worker of the company.

    Especially true for larger corps like Amazon

    Paradoxvoid,
    @Paradoxvoid@aussie.zone avatar

    That may be so, but that’s not the way that the initial tweet is using the term, and not the commonly understood definition.

    I’m not denying that Valve as a whole have been a force for good in the PC gaming market, but it’s pointless to argue semantics and make up definitions to better suit personal bias instead of debating the actual point that’s being made.

    dan1101,

    Valve releasing a video on how to break down the Steam Deck was one of the best things I’ve seen from a large company in a long time.

    asexualchangeling,

    I still love that video, ‘Don’t do this becouse it could be dangerous, but it’s your device, so here’s how’

    FreeFacts,

    they usually mean they don’t engage in anti-competitive practices.

    But they do. They forbid devs to sell their games cheaper on other storefronts (outside of timed sales). Basically they enforce anti-competitive pricing on products in a way that makes it impossible for the devs to move the platform costs into consumer prices.

    Devs could sell the product on Epic for example for $49 and make the same amount of profit as they do on Steam when priced $59 due to lower cut, but they can’t do it because Valve forbids it. It anti-competitively protects Valve and their 30% cut against competitors who would take lesser cuts, at the expense of end customers.

    GeneralEmergency,

    Epic is chasing that because they really want what Valve has, though no doubt they plan to speedrun the enshittification process as soon as they think it safe.

    Like what Steam did with Greenlight and the plague of early access asset flips that clogged its home page for years?

    stillwater,

    Greenlight had nothing to do with selling out the end user experience to cash out on providing value and leaving the service near unusable, unless you have some kind of compulsion where you have to buy everything on Steam.

    GeneralEmergency,

    The trading card feature created an ecosystem allowing cheap asset flips to quickly make the threshold. And make their money back, creating a positive feedback loop.

    Steam allowed its store to be flooded with these games at the expense of its customers because it got it’s cut.

    pkpenguin,

    I’ve never understood this complaint because it takes no effort at all to just ignore these games

    Jakeroxs,

    Do you think they wanted it to be abused? It’s pretty obvious they didn’t like the way it went which is why they got rid of it…

    Edgelord_Of_Tomorrow,

    A prerequisite for enshittification is to have a non-shit product, so Epic are actually a safe bet against enshittification.

    SnipingNinja,

    Steam is a natural monopoly, which although still not entirely good but are a wholly different beast from monopolies made by exploiting flaws in the system

    nora,

    What’s a natural monopoly? Valve currently has the freedom to implement anything they want within an extent because they’re so popular. If they decided they wanted to charge devs 35% would people stop using it? Probably not. Steam’s monopoly is as bad as any other for the same reason any other monopoly is bad.

    coltorl,

    A natural monopoly is when an industry is difficult to break into, making competition difficult or impossible. This favors incumbents, in fact, a lot of industries are natural monopolies (pharma, aerospace, chip production).

    The difficulty of breaking into an industry may be because:

    • new players cannot compete with established scale
    • start up costs require a nearly all-or-nothing approach, high risk
    • regulations tie the hand of new innovators
    SnipingNinja,

    Look it up? It’s an actual term, not something I made up for whatever reason you assumed to argue against something I didn’t even say. I already said it’s still not a good thing, it just would have happened regardless of whoever that was able to do it on scale first.

    stillwater,

    You may want to read up on Ma Bell or Microsoft’s legal issues with Internet Explorer in the 90s to see what specifically was so bad about monopolies like those, and then revisit this idea.

    WindowsEnjoyer,

    same as saying Microsoft doesn’t have a monopoly on PC Gaming because Mac and Linux exist

    😡

    Kecessa, (edited )

    Actual unpopular opinion: I don’t give a fuck, I want my launcher to launch my games, all of them do it, Steam just comes with a shit load of extra stuff I don’t care about. I buy my games where they’re the cheapest and with all the free games on Epic I rarely use Steam anymore. If they’re the same price I’ll go with the platform that give the devs the biggest share of the profit and that’s not Steam.

    Edit: See? That was the unpopular opinion…

    stillwater,

    It’s not unpopular, it’s just banal.

    Kecessa,

    Based on the votes and the opinion of the majority that hates Epic and wouldn’t mind seeing Steam have a real monopoly? Seems pretty unpopular to me!

    stillwater, (edited )

    Based on how you completely changed what your point from one comment to the other, it seems you realized you had to have something more interesting to opine.

    GeneralEmergency,

    ITT: G*mers being Stockholmed.

    jcit878,

    I can’t name a single other digital service anywhere near steam level of trust. things you bought don’t disappear. they are on the record saying there is a contingency in case of shutdown. they havnt a used their position. as far as market leaders go, you could do worse

    GeneralEmergency,

    Steam happily took money from unity asset flips and one level early access titles for years.

    They have zero quality control and instead hashed out the curator system for users to do their job for them.

    NightOwl,

    I don’t want a curated store though and would rather have people be able to release games, and let users decide if it is something they want or not. I can access reviews myself and don’t need companies deciding what game is or isn’t worthy of being available. And users is who I trust more anyways, which is why for so long search term + reddit is what I’ve relied on.

    Kimano,

    I mean, isn’t community self-policing and an overly tolerant attitude towards picking what type of games are allowed on your platform exactly what we want from them?

    conciselyverbose,

    Quality control is another word for "high barrier to entry", and especially with their market position, being rejected by Steam for some arbitrary reason would effectively kill your project.

    Not only should they not restrict the ability to sell your games there without a concrete reason; they shouldn't be permitted to do so. A company with that much influence shouldn't be allowed to be a gatekeeper of what constitutes a "good" game.

    Their review system and strong return policy are more than enough.

    stillwater,

    Caveat emptor. If you bought an asset flip, that’s on you. Steam didn’t force you to buy it.

    GeneralEmergency,

    Great job, missing my point entirely.

    Steam created an ecosystem for these asset flips for their own gain, at the expense of the customers and legitimate Devs.

    stillwater, (edited )

    I didn’t ignore it, you just didn’t think it through.

    You’re complaining about having more options as if it’s some kind of moral stand. But the only reason to be mad about those things is if you were forced to buy them. Steam doesn’t only have to sell games that you specifically approve of and it’s not some kind of moral failing to sell games that are low quality.

    This isn’t even getting into how you’re ignoring history to make the claim that they did it all for their bottom line and not the huge amount of user demand for them to open up the store. This also isn’t getting into how any money coming in from asset flips specifically is negligible, and not at all like some kind of NFT scam level of dubious behaviour like you’re referring to it.

    The only reason to be this mad about more games being sold on Steam is if you feel a need to buy it all.

    Honytawk,

    Valve still promotes those games by having them in their store.

    stillwater,

    That’s an extremely loose idea of “promotion”, to the point of manufacturing upset. A storefront does not inherently promote something merely by offering it, that’s like saying a convenience store promotes Pepsi and Coca-Cola because they sell both even though both those companies have extremely strict promotional initiatives that ensure no crossover.

    pkpenguin,

    This is a lot like saying YouTube is evil for allowing anyone to upload videos to their platform

    Honytawk,

    Youtube videos are free

    SnowdenHeroOfOurTime,

    Why would you censor the word gamer? The Internet is bizarre

    GeneralEmergency,

    Because there is a gamer. Someone who plays games.

    And Gmer. Someone who’s entire personality is based around games, and not in the fun healthy way. But in the justifying a monopoly because it’s their colour way. Just look at some of the comments here and you’ll see a lot of Gmers.

    SnowdenHeroOfOurTime,

    Ok, so that is the what, but what is the why? Why the censored word? I don’t get it. Nonetheless I’m closer to getting it now so thank you for that much

    blind3rdeye,

    I’m never heard of ‘Gmer’ like that until a few seconds ago; but I’ll go on and assume that G*mers might refer to ‘both’ words.

    SRo,

    Lol you pretentious cunt

    GeneralEmergency,

    Hit a nerve I guess.

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