HalfLifeExpert
Posts: 911
Joined: 7/20/2015 From: California, United States Status: offline
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ORIGINAL: cdcool quote:
ORIGINAL: HalfLifeExpert quote:
ORIGINAL: thewood1 quote:
ORIGINAL: kevinkin Steam extracts a fee from developers. Many players understandably avoid middle men like Steam. To each everyone's own. Kevin So do you boycott all distribution businesses? I am assuming you must home grow all of your food, because there are on average 8-10 companies between you and a farm for a typical meal at home. I am also assuming that you think Matrix pays nothing for distributing games, processing payments, marketing, etc. through its sites. I am not for or against Steam, but I discern little difference between Steam and the other companies that Matrix works with to process games to retail. I would bet, to the warfaresims guys, Matrix is just another version of Steam. Yeah, I mean, its basically an obvious assumption for a service like Steam or Matrix to take some money from every sale. That's how Valve benefits and makes money from having 3rd party games on Steam. They only make so much from their catalogue of titles. While there were some bumps in the road, Steam has been a godsend for independent developers. Introversion Software (which made such games as DEFCON, Darwinia and their most recent title Prison Architect), was among the first indie developers to put their few products on Steam. They had some financial problems a couple times in their 16 year history, and it was literally sales of their games on Steam that kept them alive as a company. The company's wiki page gives some details and sources on the company's history, and as an example of a great indie developer success story https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Introversion_Software quote:
ORIGINAL: cdcool any two STEAM games, War in the West and Command or whatever. Sometimes you can, sometimes you can't, it will ask you to shut down one. Why exactly would you want to run two games at a time? I never thought of such a limitation because it never crossed my mind to play two games at once. I've been using Steam almost as long as it has been in existence, and I honestly do not understand most of the criticism. I am especially irritated when people refer to Steam as the company (i.e. "Steam needs to fix this"). Valve is the company, Steam is the service/software. Why play two Steam games at once? maybe because I have a dual monitor setup or Steam setup on another computer and I want to play two games at once..LOL or have them running at the same time because I enjoy multitasking and playing two or more games at once..LOL Steam is a Cloud storage company for pc games, I like having all my games in one place. I haven't criticized Steam, I've been on it longer than you, I'm just stating a limitation which is a fact. When Steam first started, you could only install on your root drive, do you remember that? Steam is more than just cloud storage for games. I installed steam games on large internal secondary drives before installing games on separate drives was an official feature, by doing the simplest thing and installing steam on the secondary drive. I don't think I am fully understanding the limitation you speak of. You cannot be logged into your steam account on two separate machines simultaneously. That is just as simple security and counter piracy measure, that is all. Plus many pre-steam games had something like this by requiring the CD/DVD be inserted to play, so that is nothing new. Regarding multi tasking more than one game on the same machine, well I think you might be in the minority on that, you are honestly the first person I have heard of claiming to want to do such things. On Steam longer than me? I am curious, what was your first Steam game? Mine was Half Life 2, I got it as an Xmas gift in 2004, and created my Steam account that morning of Dec 25 2004, as it was required to play Half Life 2. Half Life 2 was basically steam's launch title when that game was released on November 16, 2004. There were a handful of Valve's previous titles on Steam before that, but it was basically introduced to the gaming world with Half Life 2.
< Message edited by HalfLifeExpert -- 8/22/2017 1:45:03 AM >
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