This is STILL true today, and digital is no different since most games require an account. Even GoG.com requires you have an account to buy games, if I remember right. It's the same with every digital place you buy games. It's like that, so you can redownload the game later and keep track that you own it. All that Steam does differently, is use it's own program to do everything easily without having to open up the browser and going to the store site.Karinas23 wrote:hell i remember buying PHYSICAL COPIES in SHOPS and being told EVERY time "since this is a pc game you wont be able to return it" so this is no different.
This is true too. Most don't allow refunds for 3 reasons.Karinas23 wrote:Oh no muh freedom, if it was my freedom to keep my house id give a shit but it isnt. This idea that steam could take your all your games away....its just never going to happen, have you ever walked into a shop and had the manager run up to you and go "loloLOLoolOL you cant come in here because i feel like it" no. stopping people using steam is not in steams interest.
No, with gog you download it and do whatever you want with it afterward. You can throw your account away, you will never need it. If you keep it, it is just the convenience of a cloud backup. Steam on the other hands suspects you all the time of being an pirate and likes therefore to monitor the usage of the bought software everytime... or when you want to use your rightfully bought product without being under the eyes of big brother (or big mama), you have to ask before kindly (offline mode activation) ... if you don't ask for permission and gets out of the sight of steam, you will be rightfully punished ... by a non-working product! "Bad Boy/girl.... I told you don't run away without allowance!"Jirodyne wrote:This is STILL true today, and digital is no different since most games require an account. Even GoG.com requires you have an account to buy games, if I remember right. It's the same with every digital place you buy games. It's like that, so you can redownload the game later and keep track that you own it. All that Steam does differently, is use it's own program to do everything easily without having to open up the browser and going to the store site.Karinas23 wrote:hell i remember buying PHYSICAL COPIES in SHOPS and being told EVERY time "since this is a pc game you wont be able to return it" so this is no different.
Why paying customers accepting treated as pirate? We should not accept that... as also the "Gamers' bill of right" discourage this!Jirodyne wrote:This is true too. Most don't allow refunds for 3 reasons.Karinas23 wrote:Oh no muh freedom, if it was my freedom to keep my house id give a shit but it isnt. This idea that steam could take your all your games away....its just never going to happen, have you ever walked into a shop and had the manager run up to you and go "loloLOLoolOL you cant come in here because i feel like it" no. stopping people using steam is not in steams interest.
[...]Those 3 are the biggest main reasons PC games aren't refundable. Especially back 10+ years ago where the only 'defence' games had were a single CD-Key that once used couldn't be used again.
Because not everybody who pays does it the legal way.badhabit wrote:Why paying customers accepting treated as pirate?
Childishness aside, I'm not sure what you're babbling about here. You don't have to put Steam in offline mode *before* you go offline. Every time my internet connection goes down (which, lately, is a lot as my ISP upgrades its infrastructure) I have no problem playing my Steam games without an internet connection. I don't have to do anything ahead of time. I have played many hours of LoG1 on flights (no WiFi). So FUD elsewhere, please.badhabit wrote:or when you want to use your rightfully bought product without being under the eyes of big brother (or big mama), you have to ask before kindly (offline mode activation) ... if you don't ask for permission and gets out of the sight of steam, you will be rightfully punished ... by a non-working product! "Bad Boy/girl.... I told you don't run away without allowance!"
Why paying customers accepting treated as pirate? We should not accept that... as also the "Gamers' bill of right" discourage this!
My problem with steam games is that steam is borked and outdated. As a platform, it really needs an update to be comparable to other 2010 platforms (such as all mobile stores)mvdeckard wrote:So, enjoy your borked, virus-infested, outdated games, pirates.
I bought LoG2 within 2 hours of downloading it. I don't think this is a bad thing to say.I'm amazed the mods even allow some people in this thread to openly discuss how they pirate games - not exactly the brightest bulbs.
Indeed and that's where my beef with Steam lies. I have a perfectly functioning web browser which I can use to download Grimrock from the HumbleBundle website. There is absolutely no reason to install additional software, just to play a particular game.Jirodyne wrote:This is STILL true today, and digital is no different since most games require an account. Even GoG.com requires you have an account to buy games, if I remember right. It's the same with every digital place you buy games. It's like that, so you can redownload the game later and keep track that you own it. All that Steam does differently, is use it's own program to do everything easily without having to open up the browser and going to the store site.Karinas23 wrote:hell i remember buying PHYSICAL COPIES in SHOPS and being told EVERY time "since this is a pc game you wont be able to return it" so this is no different.
Outdated how? And do NOT Compare PC gaming to Mobile gaming, or anything to do with Mobile gaming. They are not the same, do not follow the same rules, and Mobile Gaming is all about stealing your money without you noticing and has a completly different market. It's like comparing Youtube videos to Movies. They are close, but not the same. How one behaves is different than how another behaves. So far, I haven't seen anything wrong, for consumers, in Steam's store system except the very very VERY rare time where a game will have Description and Screenshots that are fake, and those games are usually taken down within a few days of that. One of the reasons why some games change their names, to trick people to looking at it again. But again, that is the fault of the Game Devs, not Steam, and they try to catch that stuff quickly.any6 wrote:My problem with steam games is that steam is borked and outdated. As a platform, it really needs an update to be comparable to other 2010 platforms (such as all mobile stores)