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Spedwell, do games w Court rules Gabe Newell must appear in person to testify in Steam anti-trust lawsuit

Valve offers a great service, and I enjoy it a lot. But it’s very difficult for a competitor to enter the market because they won’t be able to match Steam’s services immediately. Typically in a market the approach is then to undercut Steam, but that is exactly what this policy is designed to make impractical by forcing publishers to overprice, on penalty of losing Steams’ userbase.

I mean I don’t know what else to say. It is anti-competitive. It doesn’t take too much to see why. There are many good articles and legal briefs on the matter. It hurts you and me, the consumer, and it hurts publishers. It enriches Valve, benevolent though they may appear. You shouldn’t like this type of strong-arming the market when Amazon does it, and you shouldn’t roll over and take it from Valve either.

Doesn’t even matter, the court is going to sort it out for us. But I hate to see the reputational hit Wolfire is taking here. I like their studio, I believe their developers are operating in genuine good faith, and I think they are doing consumers a favor.

Spedwell, do games w Court rules Gabe Newell must appear in person to testify in Steam anti-trust lawsuit

The Platform Most Favored Nation policy employed by Steam is the one at issue in this case. And yes, it is anticompetitive. It abuses userbase size to prevent alternative marketplaces from providing fewer services for smaller cuts

Spedwell, (edited ) do games w Court rules Gabe Newell must appear in person to testify in Steam anti-trust lawsuit

Yes, that is problematic. Not by itself, but coupled with a large captive userbase it is. As an example:

Let’s say you want to start a game marketplace, which simply runs a storefront and content distribution—you specifically don’t want to run a workshop, friends network, video streaming, or peer multiplayer. Because you don’t offer these other services, you keep costs down, and can charge a 5% fee instead of a 30%.

With Steam’s policy, publishers may choose to:

  1. List on your platform at $45, and forego the userbase of Steam
  2. List on Steam and your platform at $60, and forego the reduced costs your platform could offer

Obviously, pricing is much more sophisticated than this. You’d have to account for change in sales volume and all. Point is, though, that publishers (and consumers!) cannot take advantage of alternative marketplaces that offer fewer services at lower cost.

The question the court has to answer is whether the userbase/market share captured by Steam causes choice (2) to be de-facto necessary for a game to succeed commercially. If so, then the policy would be the misuse of market dominance to stifle competition.

And I think Wolfire might be able to successfully argue that.

Spedwell, do games w Court rules Gabe Newell must appear in person to testify in Steam anti-trust lawsuit

Steam has such a policy. Valve may remove any games from Steam which are sold on other marketplaces for less than they are on Steam.

Spedwell, do games w Court rules Gabe Newell must appear in person to testify in Steam anti-trust lawsuit

…unless you have a policy that requires other marketplaces to sell at the same price as on Steam, undercutting the ability for “better deals” to exist at all.

Which is what the lawsuit is actually arguing is going on.

Spedwell, do games w Court rules Gabe Newell must appear in person to testify in Steam anti-trust lawsuit

Thanks, that clears it up. So yeah, I think Wolfire has a case to make, then.

Spedwell, do games w Court rules Gabe Newell must appear in person to testify in Steam anti-trust lawsuit

I was under the impression that the policy required a game’s price to be the same on all marketplaces, even if it’s not a steam key being purchased. I.e. a $60 game on steam must sell for $60 off-platform, including on the publisher’s own launcher.

I just went to double check my interpretation, but the case brief by Mason LLP’s site doesn’t really specify.

If it only applies to steam keys, as you say, then I agree they don’t really have a case since it’s Steam that must supply distribution and other services.

But, if the policy applies to independent marketplaces, then it should be obvious that it is anticompetitive. The price on every platform is driven up to compensate for Steam’s 30% fees, even if that particular platform doesn’t attempt to provide services equivalent to Steam.

Spedwell, do games w Court rules Gabe Newell must appear in person to testify in Steam anti-trust lawsuit

Wolfire originally operated Humble Bundle, and they have a very legitimate case. Steam uses anticompetitive pricing policies that makes it difficult for other marketplaces to compete.

Spedwell, do games w Court rules Gabe Newell must appear in person to testify in Steam anti-trust lawsuit

I believe it is in the Steam marketplace agreement, and applies to all games. Are you referring to sales on other platforms, or to the full listed price?

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