Steam Is Under Fire

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  • Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
  • Valve have a big legal fight in their future. Learn Back-end Programming: boot.dev/ Use code BELLULARNEWS for 25% off. Sponsored by Boot.dev.
    Sources:
    www.gamedevelo...
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    www.polygon.co...
    x.com/Falconee...
    www.pcgamer.co...
    / 1788570770232300021
    vietnamnet.vn/....
    / 1790042824043348161
    gameworldobser...
    ec.europa.eu/c...

Комментарии • 2,4 тыс.

  • @BellularNews
    @BellularNews  4 месяца назад +143

    Learn Back-end Programming: boot.dev/ Use code BELLULARNEWS for 25% off. Sponsored by Boot.dev.

    • @LifeWulf
      @LifeWulf 4 месяца назад +1

      Microsoft Copilot also can help walk you through programming problems, though I do wonder if Boot.dev’s bot is more tailored to the task.

    • @aw3s0me12
      @aw3s0me12 4 месяца назад +3

      7:07 Choosing to use a iPhone,..is like choosing to sit on a island no connection to all the mainlands arround.
      Who uses iPhone anyway? ^^
      *As of early 2024, Android has a 70.69% market share worldwide.* In the US, iPhones hold a market share of 60.77%.
      More than 1 billion iPhones and over 3 billion Android devices are currently active.
      *Android smartphones accounted for 66% of all smartphone sales worldwide in Q4 2023.*
      _13.03.2024_
      There we have it
      > Dun use iPhones lol

    • @HH-hd7nd
      @HH-hd7nd 4 месяца назад +4

      The swastika is not a Hindu symbol, it is based on a Nordic rune. If you look at the swastika and the Hindu symbol (or an almost identical symbol from Japan) you'll notice that it is actually kind of a mirror image.
      Showing Nazi symbols is still illegal in Germany btw. Exemption are only made for educational purposes as well as certain movies. Video games however are different and the ban is still in effect.

    • @aw3s0me12
      @aw3s0me12 4 месяца назад +2

      @@HH-hd7nd Holy Frigga, man of culture spits the truth

    • @maximvsdread1610
      @maximvsdread1610 4 месяца назад +1

      @@HH-hd7nd The oldest known one is 15,000 years old found carved into a mammoth tusk in Ukraine. The Navajo of North America used to use the symbol until the smallhat run government forced them through bribery to stop using it during WW2. That distribution across the globe should tell you WHO was in the Americas first. That symbol traveled around the entire northern hemisphere during that last Iceage.

  • @Shad0w-One
    @Shad0w-One 3 месяца назад +226

    another thing in Poland about steam is the pricing, people are angry at how much the games are overpriced, due to steams wrong currency conversion, which of course means more money for valve, there's even a petition to solve this problem

    • @VillenmerthAzul
      @VillenmerthAzul 2 месяца назад +18

      That's not just Steam, all publishers do this in all Eastern markets.

    • @StachWokulski
      @StachWokulski Месяц назад

      we just buy from Argentina for us dollars, we still buy games but we create accounts with vpn.

  • @Notivarg
    @Notivarg 3 месяца назад +94

    As a Polish person, the main problem I have with Steam is their regional pricing. Our per capita GDP is around 1/3 of regions like the UK/US/EU, we don't use the Euro, yet our regional prices are usually higher than 95% other regions, including the aformentioned US/UK/EU. For example, the Polish version of Starfield on Steam is the second most expensive version, with only the Swiss version being slightly more expensive.
    Not that I want to buy Starfield, I just remember my jaw dropping when I saw it was the equivalent of $86, while it's $70 in the US.

  • @asemiintelligentork8388
    @asemiintelligentork8388 4 месяца назад +4057

    The only reason Steam can be considered a monopoly is because their competitors keep shooting themselves in the feet with anti consumer bullshit. Steam is the peoples monopoly, it wouldn't exist as it is unless most people agreed that it's the superior platform.

    • @smidlee7747
      @smidlee7747 4 месяца назад +218

      Valve main power comes from gamers.

    • @simplysmiley4670
      @simplysmiley4670 4 месяца назад +365

      Pretty much, Valve doesn't even do anything about their competition, literally.
      EGS and such just keep fumbling the bag royally hard.

    • @lucidnonsense942
      @lucidnonsense942 4 месяца назад +87

      Steam penalises Devs who list on drm free sites like gog. Ask the rim world dev what he thinks of steam

    • @Lucky_Drive
      @Lucky_Drive 4 месяца назад +63

      Sorry but this is a terrible take. "The Peoples Monopoly"? That sounds like something out of a cyberpunk corpo-dystopia. Monopolies are bad for consumers, and are only good for the corporation, full stop. Just because you like steam does not mean its at all healthy or good for gamers OR devs. Steam has a monopoly, so they effectively dictate how much of an arbitrary number that developers HAVE to pay them if devs want their game to be successful on PC.
      All you need to do is think about this for 5 seconds and you quickly realize why this is ultimately a bad thing for gamers and developers, regardless of how great steam is.

    • @smidlee7747
      @smidlee7747 4 месяца назад +216

      @@Lucky_Drive Tell a lie a thousand times is still a lie. Steam doesn't have an monopoly which is how Epic store gets exclusives, Ubisoft refuse to bring their games to Steam ,etc. What makes Steam successful are the gamers. This is why Sony are bringing their exclusives which they have a monopoly over to PC because that's where the gamers are.
      I remember when everyone forsake PC and claimed it was dead and Valve was the only company that cared to keep PC gaming alive. Now that Valve have been successful winning gamers over those who forsake PC wants to give us the middle finger.

  • @Mithguar
    @Mithguar 4 месяца назад +1397

    Main reason GOG is still a thing is because they are legit competition to Steam. They offer a feature that valve doesn't and for some is VERY valuable. That is of course DRM free games.
    On the other hand EGS didn't bring anything new to the table other then pissing people off with exclusives.

    • @F_Around_and_find_out
      @F_Around_and_find_out 4 месяца назад +90

      I mean, Steam do sell DRM free games, just not all of them. Some games even have DRM removed through an update. GOG is just actually serious about the DRM free policy and that's a nice niche to have (legit planning a purchase there soon). But a niche is a niche, it can guaranteed an existence, not dominance.
      The thing about Steam is it is huge and it don't care about DRM. And big game publishers knew this and will keep selling games on Steam. And because of that gamers will always go to Steam, there are nowhere else to turn to. Unless more and more publishers set up their own stores, Steam stay dominant.

    • @alphaursaeminoris1
      @alphaursaeminoris1 4 месяца назад

      ​@@F_Around_and_find_outYou don't understand, Steam itself is DRM, a game without 3rd party DRM like denuvo still has DRM in Steam

    • @AxleTrade
      @AxleTrade 4 месяца назад +171

      And GOG does the one thing the other platforms are too lazy to do. Make sure retro games work on modern hardware. Meanwhile Epic just brute forces their own monopoly.

    • @halycon404
      @halycon404 4 месяца назад

      Yes, but here's the thing. This story is in Poland. Where is GOG? Poland. Read the whole story and this is like a checklist of Steam vs GOG. I don't think this is tin foil hat territory where GOG is using the judicial system against Steam. I do think this is a situation of CD Projekt Red, the owners of GOG, doing it. CD Project Red is in and out of the news in Poland for shady stuff with the government and government intervention depending on the day. They have a market cap 6 times larger than the entire GDP of Poland. They've also made absolutely no secret of the fact they want to own their own distribution platform as the main seller of their games. Which they cannot do so long as Steam exists in it's current incarnation in Europe. Which is to say getting this through the courts in Poland is significantly easier than getting this through the courts in the EU. Poland is looking at possibly billions of dollars of downstream tax revenue over time if it can pry Steam's deathgrip off the digital games marketplace. The only valid competitor most consumers see is headquartered in their country.

    • @kofteistkofte
      @kofteistkofte 4 месяца назад +100

      GOG, with their limited budget compare to the Valve and Epic, focused on two aspects, supporting DRM-Free gaming and re-packaging old games for modern systems. And they do those without using anti-consumer and anti-competition practices like Epic. That's why I would consider them the biggest competition to Steam and it's clear both stores are peaceful with each other. Sadly, using GOG is kinda hard for me due to two reasons:
      1- They do not have localized pricing for most regions, so that makes games on GOG kinda expensive on where I live.
      2- They don't have an official Linux client. Yes I can use their website and/or 3th party clients (Lutris, Heroic, etc.) that they provide apis for but it's not at the same convenience with official client

  • @cptlonesong3211
    @cptlonesong3211 4 месяца назад +1182

    Viet guy here.
    Our local devs either pump out cash grabbing mobile games registered to Singapore or import trash P2W MMOs and expect people to whale for their profits. We stopped doing that since like 2010s.

    • @invincible98
      @invincible98 4 месяца назад +111

      so gatcha/gambling games huh. are they trying to use the government to remove competition? (steam)

    • @cptlonesong3211
      @cptlonesong3211 4 месяца назад +63

      @@invincible98 big dev companies would do that

    • @duongquan4986
      @duongquan4986 4 месяца назад +132

      And fucking killed off Vietnamese indie devs publishing genuinely good games (which they wouldn't bat an eye) on Steam

    • @dale7326
      @dale7326 4 месяца назад +20

      Vietnam is slowly following Japan gaming model actually . While Poland has issues with distributions

    • @alexjackyperson101
      @alexjackyperson101 4 месяца назад +24

      I guess people in Vietnam have to pirate

  • @sakaraist
    @sakaraist 4 месяца назад +4413

    Valve isn't anti-competitive, it's competitors are just anti-consumer...

    • @laurencefraser
      @laurencefraser 4 месяца назад +161

      Most of them, anyway.

    • @Jim-o4t
      @Jim-o4t 4 месяца назад +34

      Exactly.

    • @ArawnOfAnnwn
      @ArawnOfAnnwn 4 месяца назад +246

      GOG is the most pro-consumer distributor by far. Way more than Steam could even claim to be. And it's still minuscule...

    • @Furluge
      @Furluge 4 месяца назад +147

      GoG is anti-consumer?! But yeah, Steam does well because it brings a lot of value to the platform. It makes you want to buy there. GoG does well because it has it's own niche of reviving old games, anti-drm, and an installer being 100% optional.

    • @kaplua8143
      @kaplua8143 4 месяца назад +3

      That's what i was thinking while watching the video...

  • @mateuszbanaszak4671
    @mateuszbanaszak4671 3 месяца назад +700

    In summary :
    1) Being the only competent service ≠ Monopoly
    2) China is disturbing the water again
    3) Poland earns least and pays most

    • @econo1708
      @econo1708 3 месяца назад +34

      Holding the majority of the market (80% in Steam's case) and having significant control over it to the point of being able to straight up impose various constraints on game developers like not allowing them to set prices lower than on their platform or else they'll forbid them from putting up their games there is basically a textbook natural monopoly.

    • @mateuszbanaszak4671
      @mateuszbanaszak4671 3 месяца назад +46

      @@econo1708
      Is a baker guilty of monopolistic practices, if every other baker in his area uses sawdust, instead of flour, to make his bread?

    • @econo1708
      @econo1708 3 месяца назад

      @@mateuszbanaszak4671 Is he guilty of monopolistic practices? No. Is he a monopoly? Yes (assuming that everyone is buying from his bakery as everything else in the area is crap).
      Monopolies are never a good thing in free markets. even if they don't do any monopolistic practices (yet), as they naturally make the barrier of entry higher for potential competition and do tons of other things that you might already know if you have some idea about economics.
      And I wouldn't say that the sawdust allegory applies to the situation surrounding the PC gaming market, since nobody is "using sawdust to make the dough" here.
      There are platforms that are as good, if not better in some areas than Steam that fail to gain any significant amount of traction over the years, like GOG which is sitting at a mere 2% of the marketshare, even though it's been here for more than a decade, or itchio, which most people haven't even heard about.
      I wouldn't compare what Epic does to making bread out of sawdust either, since their store is fine, although I wouldn't defend the monopolistic practices that they do.
      But on the other hand, seeing all the things that Epic does to put themselves out there, like making a hit game, getting all of those timed exclusivity deals, giving away multiple games for free every week for years and still completely failing to gain a significant amount of market share should tell you a lot about the state of the market.
      Being a good platform is definitely not enough to get customers.
      Also, forgot to mention, Steam might be guilty of actual monopolistic practices, since they're apparently not allowing publishers to sell games for lower prices on other platforms if they don't want their game to get deplatformed off Steam, which would be a distaster for the publisher as the game wouldn't sell.

    • @starnmoons
      @starnmoons 3 месяца назад +1

      pretty much

    • @starnmoons
      @starnmoons 3 месяца назад +3

      @@econo1708 yes they would be able to do that but, they are NOT doing that

  • @degrengolada2360
    @degrengolada2360 4 месяца назад +1416

    Also another thing with Poland and Steam, Polish prices are highest in Europe, but Poles earn 4 time less that Germany, and there is petition to Valve to adjust the prices because prices calculation were before covid and don't take inflation in consideration.

    • @TheTotallyRealXiJinping
      @TheTotallyRealXiJinping 4 месяца назад

      Should have stuck being a German conquest then, huh?

    • @bluebroham
      @bluebroham 4 месяца назад +77

      I thought the pricing was up to the developer/publisher? I don't think valve sets prices for games outside of their own.

    • @Falsechicken
      @Falsechicken 4 месяца назад +250

      @@bluebroham Steam changes the base price of everything depending on where you are. So if I publisher says this game in USA is $60 Steam will attempt to adjust the price for another market so it's not insanely expensive. Idk how it works under the hood but I would assume a publisher could opt out if they wanted. It's a service both ways. The customer can pay more local prices on an international market and the publisher doesn't have to handle looking into that themselves.

    • @bartekmedrzak6443
      @bartekmedrzak6443 4 месяца назад +99

      @@bluebroham I think there is a auto suggestion from valve and many devs just go with

    • @cooldudeninja0219
      @cooldudeninja0219 4 месяца назад +45

      @@bluebroham It might be a case of automation rather then dev/publisher setting the price. I say this because of what pirate software has said (though I can be wrong I would suggest looking yourself) that most companies don't do regional pricing which leads them to using US standard or letting steam do it.

  • @Boydar
    @Boydar 3 месяца назад +2014

    I see Polish flag, I click video

  • @ryoukaip
    @ryoukaip 4 месяца назад +258

    As a Vietnamese, I LOL'ed real hard when I heard that statement. Most of the "local" game here are just rebranded Chinese crap, with horrible gameplay and gacha stuff. They can't even make a good game, and they dare to said that Steam is "anti-competitive" while Steam is providing a better experience. All gamer in Vietnam are absolutely pissed because of this.
    Another example is miHoYo games (Honkai Impact 3rd, Genshin Impact and Honkai: Star Rail). They can't publish these game by themselves because of various reason (mostly tax and censorship imo), so they are distributing them via a Vietnamese distributor and all those games got rated 18+ while it's 12+ in Europe. That's just ridiculous. That's why a bunch of talented Vietnamese dev preferred going overseas or working for a foreign company. Making a company in Vietnam is hell.

    • @cl8804
      @cl8804 3 месяца назад +3

      bruh muh steam blatantly distributing games in thai ming doe

  • @Sub-Mythos
    @Sub-Mythos 4 месяца назад +3483

    It's sad when having better consumer interactions compared to other storefronts results in being accused of being anti-competitive.

    • @HikariLight121
      @HikariLight121 4 месяца назад +411

      Its petty jealousy. The storefronts in Vietnam do not provide the same customer experience that Steam does, so they are acting like a bunch of 5 year olds who are throwing a tantrum cause they are not getting their way.
      Same can be said for many other storefronts, they don't provide the same user experience that Steam does and they throw out Anti-Competitive practice crap because they refuse to provide a better user experience to their customers.

    • @WhichDoctor1
      @WhichDoctor1 4 месяца назад +82

      However they got their Monopoly status, monopolies are bad for consumers and great for the holder of the Monopoly. In this case the consumer also includes game devs as they are also customers of steam’s services. Steam might be less bad than they could be. But one company having a stranglehold over the vast majority of PC game distribution is still worse than the alternative

    • @iulioh
      @iulioh 4 месяца назад +214

      Monopolies are not bad per se, they are if they engage in anticompetitive practices.
      Put simply, no one seems to be able to do things better than Steam.
      What should you do if your product is so good no one can compete?

    • @Day7Reset
      @Day7Reset 4 месяца назад +112

      I hope more competition steps up, fails, and proves why good customer practices is always best. Steam is the example of vote with your wallet and winning.

    • @bok4822
      @bok4822 4 месяца назад +60

      They are anti-competitive only in the sense that they do not allow discounts or lower prices on games if the lower price is available for another platform only. Think if a game had a discount on Epic games store while still being full price on Steam. That is illegal based on Steam's terms of service, with the exception if the game is sold at a "comparable" price within a certain time period. So what I'm trying to say is, they do not allow other platforms to try to get a step up in price. This is honestly good though, because this does not just throw the developers under the bus because storefronts are trying to get customers with as low costs as possible, giving developers less money in the process. What remains is trying to make exclusive deals and the best possible customer experience. However, Steam already has the best customer experience with the most refined store, library and community functions after years of development (not saying it is all actually good, they still have some issues, but it is miles above anything comparable) so why should we switch?
      Only "option" I see is for Steam to handicap themselves in some way, even though it is only and truly the other storefronts that does not even put up the effort to even match what Steam has to offer.

  • @erfarkrasnobay
    @erfarkrasnobay 4 месяца назад +1294

    My God, I HATE how much garbage people throw into "Strategy" tag

    • @TheGeneReyva
      @TheGeneReyva 4 месяца назад +42

      [Strategy]

    • @MrSongib
      @MrSongib 4 месяца назад +139

      It means "This is confusing game"

    • @Owl90
      @Owl90 4 месяца назад +100

      seriously. That tag is effectively useless nowadays.

    • @FireFox64000000
      @FireFox64000000 4 месяца назад +103

      My favorite example of something like that is how Cars 2 is labeled NSFW and Psychological Horror.

    • @polca4love
      @polca4love 4 месяца назад +13

      ​@@Owl90 Like "ARPG".

  • @Cheater5445
    @Cheater5445 4 месяца назад +721

    Polish gamer here, would be nice to actually pay the same amount yall out there are paying. It absolutely isn't fun having to pay more than my friends from USA for example even though we get the same product.

    • @Mutation666
      @Mutation666 4 месяца назад +7

      Taxes etc is my guess

    • @igorwoek502
      @igorwoek502 4 месяца назад +291

      @@Mutation666 Nah, taxes have nothing to do with it. Steam just have not updated their currency conversion.

    • @Rose.Of.Hizaki
      @Rose.Of.Hizaki 4 месяца назад +78

      @@igorwoek502 Actually, taxes do have SOMETHING to do with it. In a lot of countries you have to pay VAT on top of your purchases. But that isnt the issue here. The main issue is that publishers often set their own regional pricing and steam has to abide by what the publisher asks them to do.
      If you lived in a poorer country. Asking $80 for a AAA game is pretty insane when your income is already pretty low. Nobody in that country is going to buy an $80 game so they have to price it low at a more affordable level for them which means that prices are higher for the richer countries that can afford to pay for it. Its just how it works.
      Some countries pay more so that less well off gamers can also have some games to play. You dont need to like the way that it is but you could always not buy the game or wait till its on sale.

    • @somebodyanonymousx
      @somebodyanonymousx 4 месяца назад +20

      Same in Czechia
      Why do we have to have pay 60 Euro

    • @somebodyanonymousx
      @somebodyanonymousx 4 месяца назад +25

      @@igorwoek502 Not even currency conversion
      I am Czech, but I still have to pay equivalent of 60 Euro. I assume that all Euro countries have the same price

  • @eradragon3090
    @eradragon3090 4 месяца назад +936

    Steam only looks like a monopoly because all their competitors keep slamming their cod piece in car doors and expecting us to clap.

    • @TheSteelkeeper0
      @TheSteelkeeper0 4 месяца назад +9

      true

    • @Harsh-mg2em
      @Harsh-mg2em 3 месяца назад +32

      Kinda true, but GOG is pretty good, and does wonders for game preservation because there is no DRM which contributes to future digital decay. It could also mean that Witcher 4 could be cheaper for everyone on GOG, if something is done about it.

    • @user-uo8ny1kj4c
      @user-uo8ny1kj4c 3 месяца назад +3

      @@Harsh-mg2em gog is meh in my opinion. If gog started selling garrys mod first, I'd give more of a shit but they didn't.

    • @Harsh-mg2em
      @Harsh-mg2em 3 месяца назад

      @@user-uo8ny1kj4c As a shop, it's just a shop, better than the Uplays of the world because it's less intrusive, and actually it can connect all shops into one. Still, the main reason for GOG is that games are DRM-free, helping to preserve them forever, so even if you don't shop there everyone benefits.

    • @junokya
      @junokya 3 месяца назад

      @@user-uo8ny1kj4cbut even if they did, remember all the amounts of the steam workshop they have to get

  • @igorwoek502
    @igorwoek502 4 месяца назад +309

    A bit of background on PL situation. The main reason why Steam is being investigated here are the prices. Prices for PL are one of the highest on Steam (the conversion Valve is using for USD ---> PLN seams to be the issue here). There was a bit of public backlash about the price of Hades 2. I mean, it was roughly more expensive than everywhere else by around of 8 USD. In context of EU common market it's ridiculous. Though Super Giant Games (not Steam!) did a right thing and reimbursed that 8 USD difference to everyone who bought their game on Steam in PL.

    • @Sinaeb
      @Sinaeb 4 месяца назад +19

      that's not too much valve's fault tho, the prices conversion is a suggestion by valve to devs, devs can always set whatever prices they want for whatever regions

    • @ferinzz
      @ferinzz 4 месяца назад +83

      @@Sinaeb It kind of is though. There's the same issue in Brazil and Turkey and a few other countries. People can't afford the games anymore because the prices are out of sync with the actual income of the region.
      The reason? Valve found out that some people were buying the games through a VPN at that regional price instead of their price.

    • @Jinkypigs
      @Jinkypigs 4 месяца назад +14

      Again, it is the dev and publisher who set the price. So why blame steam​@@ferinzz

    • @Jinkypigs
      @Jinkypigs 4 месяца назад +4

      Dude, I blacklist super giant game for their antics. And in this case it is risky their fault as it is them, the publisher, that set the price, not steam. So they paying customer back is just what is right. Doesn't make them saint.

    • @kurrwa
      @kurrwa 4 месяца назад +2

      How much hades cost ? It should be 130 zloty

  • @Jo-Heike
    @Jo-Heike 4 месяца назад +657

    "...restrictions on the sale of games and ancillary content on competing platforms..." Isn't that what Epic was doing when it brought those exclusive game titles?

    • @simplysmiley4670
      @simplysmiley4670 4 месяца назад +73

      Yup, they were trynna force themselves into the spot of a monopoly with their deals.

    • @Jinkypigs
      @Jinkypigs 4 месяца назад +11

      Yup

    • @SpottedHares
      @SpottedHares 4 месяца назад +6

      Will the people bootlicker for valve you would be surprise to learn that in fact no buying a license to distribute a product is not anti competitive. Now using your sudo monopoly to fix pricing is anti competitive.

    • @thefool8224
      @thefool8224 4 месяца назад +70

      @@SpottedHares i keep hearing all this BS about price fixing. but never proof of it

    • @dirge7459
      @dirge7459 4 месяца назад +63

      @@SpottedHares Could say the same about bootlicking Epic, there's loads of them hanging around, and they 100% always show up in videos/threads mentioning Valve...

  • @josephtran9983
    @josephtran9983 4 месяца назад +1619

    Domestic games distribution in Vietnam is getting licenses from Chinese devs to distribute Chinese games. mostly gacha games. It sucks. As a Vietnamese, once u tried Steam u cant go back to these "blood sucking" games

    • @mod-etc3666
      @mod-etc3666 4 месяца назад +161

      You should switch to piracy. Better then playing money traps.

    • @Sunny-zo6qy
      @Sunny-zo6qy 4 месяца назад +83

      Sounds like hell man. Sounds like hell

    • @nekotranslates
      @nekotranslates 4 месяца назад

      @@mod-etc3666 I heard that FitGirl Repack is good source to get games for free

    • @dean_l33
      @dean_l33 4 месяца назад +72

      Sail the high sea like the rest of us

    • @Otakumanu
      @Otakumanu 4 месяца назад +25

      If you have games on Steam, you can use a VPN to access them.

  • @CainDB
    @CainDB 3 месяца назад +79

    About Poland, the case is that Poland pays sometime twice and even THRICE as much as THE WHOLE DAMN WORLD for literaly ANYTHING somewhat connected to gaming, consoles, PC parts, TVs, monitors, VR headsets, games, even damn phones can cost twice as much in stores compared to the rest of the world in USD, for example, a price of PS5 for the whole world was around 450$, less than two years ago PS5 in Poland was selling for EXACTLY 814$, NEARLY TWICE AS MUCH despite being one of the poorer countries in Europe, same thing for Meta Quest headsets, Quest 2 for example costs 250€ on their website, that around 1200-1300PLN, and in Poland it costs WHOOPING 2300PLN without discount and 1999PLN with discount, once again, TWICE. AS. MUCH.

    • @kajojo2399
      @kajojo2399 2 месяца назад

      If you're talking about hardware prices in US, they do not have VAT included, so consoles, GPUs etc have 23% added to their price when they are imported to the EU.
      Regardless, the prices of games on steam are way too high in Poland.

    • @CainDB
      @CainDB 2 месяца назад +19

      @@kajojo2399 since WHEN 23% equals twice the price or sometimes THRICE the price? It's not just VAT

    • @garbage2882
      @garbage2882 2 месяца назад +6

      @@kajojo2399 dude even hungarians pay less even though they have the highest VAT in the world, we have pretty high (23%) which is even higher than germany, but it's not like it's 50%?

    • @ohajohaha
      @ohajohaha 2 месяца назад

      Quest 2 is 1500

    • @CainDB
      @CainDB 2 месяца назад

      @@ohajohaha on Allegro or other online shops? Maybe, but fresh from MediaMarkt or MediaExpert? Nope, 1999PLN was the lowest I've seen this year

  • @RPGOmen
    @RPGOmen 4 месяца назад +494

    Steam provides steam keys to competitors such as Humble Bundle, Greenman Gaming and even creators such as Cohhcarnage with his own game shop. They literally host the game of another company's sales to provide a fair market. They would have a stronger case against Apple, Nintendo and Sony. They all have had extremely shady consumer practices in the past. The U.S. government had to intervene with Sony to make them stop bullying indie developers and try to get them to give money despite not being sold on their platform.

    • @trivalentclan
      @trivalentclan 4 месяца назад +14

      Got a reference on that last sentence as I would to read about that one.

    • @bounceday
      @bounceday 4 месяца назад +2

      I saw an expose that those keys were usually extorted from the developers as promises to review, to be sold instead

    • @samamies88
      @samamies88 4 месяца назад +28

      ​​​@@bouncedayHow i understood the review&curator scam is that it happens more often on g2a and kinguin. I believe humblebundle gets keys straight from devs. (Not sure where those other sites RPG mentioned above get the keys from)

    • @SnapWireOnlyOne
      @SnapWireOnlyOne 4 месяца назад +16

      steam-dev here 90% of those keys are stolen fyi......... when devs make keys for beta testing what will happen is we give them to IGN/others and they will resell them to someone and then they will sell them for nothing

    • @Gronmin
      @Gronmin 4 месяца назад

      ​@@SnapWireOnlyOne they aren't talking about the reseller websites they are talking about third party websites that Devs/publishers sell on, that provide steam keys upon purchase. Like Humble Bundle that doesn't involve any beta keys or anything, they work directly with Devs and publishers to make the game available and have the steam keys

  • @mrsmartypants4541
    @mrsmartypants4541 3 месяца назад +45

    For context, Polish players pulled some data and apparently the game prices were inconsistent with the price of polish Złoty to USD. A petition was created to look into the matter and got enough traction for the government to take a serious look at Steam. This was one of the reasons why Steam is being investigated.

    • @MartinMitchellMorgan
      @MartinMitchellMorgan 2 месяца назад

      GOT 'EM

    • @FlashySenap
      @FlashySenap Месяц назад

      But isn't the pricing set by the developers? I know Pirate software talked about this. He has the control to set his prices and he adjusted prices differently depending on region.

    • @mrsmartypants4541
      @mrsmartypants4541 Месяц назад +1

      @@FlashySenap You don't understand. If you set your game to be 10$ on steam in the US, it should cost around 40pln in Poland, but in reality it costs 60pln. For some reason you pay +50% extra over the game's standard price because Valve's currency conversion is plain wrong.
      This is why everyone buys 3rd party keys

    • @Muhammad_Sumbul555
      @Muhammad_Sumbul555 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@FlashySenapUSD to PLN conversion on Steam is outdated, when someone sets a price of $10 for a game, Steam automatically sets prices in other countries based on its outdated conversion rate, so instead of about PLN 40, we pay about PLN 60 for a game

  • @rottenmeat5934
    @rottenmeat5934 4 месяца назад +157

    Steam may have a stranglehold on digital games, but that doesn’t mean they haven’t had earnest competition. They were just the least shit out of several publishers trying to corner the market with their AAA games.
    Breaking up Steam will almost certainly be worse for the industry.

    • @rattango9819
      @rattango9819 4 месяца назад +29

      I would think that's the point though. Break it up so several more shit stains can take over within each country coming out as "the savior of gaming" respectively. This is just a ploy.

    • @Viesta
      @Viesta 3 месяца назад +15

      moment they break up steam im pretty sure the gaming market will most likely collapse cause then nobody is keeping these AAA morons in check...

    • @connorschultz380
      @connorschultz380 3 месяца назад +3

      What would you even break it up into?

    • @Airbigbawls
      @Airbigbawls 3 месяца назад +8

      @@connorschultz380 Forcefully selling parts of the privately owned company most likely.

    • @BasileosHerodou
      @BasileosHerodou 3 месяца назад

      Poland and Vietnam aren't going to have steam broken up LOL they're the most irrelevant places ever

  • @mefjupl8679
    @mefjupl8679 4 месяца назад +78

    7:42 worst problem for me and other gamers in Poland with Steam is that it doesnt provide us with local prices. Instead it converts EU prices in Euro into our PLN currency. And often when PLN gets stronger, Steam forgets to re-convert it and keeps less favourable exchange rates for longer. Polish people also tend to earn less than people in the west of EU, often twice less but thats fine cuz we have regional prices for most goods that are lower but Steam not only doesnt have that but also games on Steam because of bad exchange rates cost more in PLN compared to other EU countries that pay in Euro.^ Thats why I never buy directly from Steam but rather Steam Keys from 3rd party online stores.

    • @Commandant_Aeon
      @Commandant_Aeon 4 месяца назад +2

      not Steam, the prices are setup by publishers.

    • @mefjupl8679
      @mefjupl8679 4 месяца назад +21

      @@Commandant_Aeon yes, price can be set country-to-country by the developer but also regionally: developer sets a price for a given region and steam by itself converts it to different currencies within that region and my country Poland is poor compared to other countries in the EU region- add old unfavourable currency exchange rates and what you get is a "bad deal" ^

    • @mefjupl8679
      @mefjupl8679 4 месяца назад +20

      @@Commandant_Aeon good example is Russia, despite being, just like Poland, in Europe^^ because it's a big region, Steam somehow recognises it as a separate region and calculates games much lower price, sometimes 2x lower that those for Poland.

    • @Mr_Topek
      @Mr_Topek 4 месяца назад +13

      ​@@Commandant_Aeon But steam gives them recommendations and 90% of the time devs just go with the prices steam recommends.

    • @Commandant_Aeon
      @Commandant_Aeon 4 месяца назад

      @@Mr_Topek and the dev's lazyness is steam's fault... how ?

  • @callmequaz9052
    @callmequaz9052 4 месяца назад +593

    An important note because people misinterpet what having a monopoly means: Steam is not a monopoly. Valve is not like facebook. They don't buy out competitors and force them to fail, Steam is just a good platform. No other company provides what Valve does. The only reason why Epic dragged customers over was by buying out games and making them exclusive instead of providing a good service. I bet the only reason 99% of people who have u-play or EA's thing is because their games "require" it, not because they're actually any good.
    Provide something better than Steam and competitiom will happen. But thats expensive and risky. It's easier to throw a tantrum and try to get them taken down by convincing people who don't know what they're talking about that they're anti-competetive than it is to just make a good and consimer friendly service.

    • @smidlee7747
      @smidlee7747 4 месяца назад +21

      Exactly.

    • @Rietto
      @Rietto 4 месяца назад

      Epic had to play dirty by paying games to be 'exclusives' to them (and losing tons of money) in order to artificially compete with Steam. That's not sustainable.

    • @IncognitoActivado
      @IncognitoActivado 4 месяца назад +8

      Piracy is much better.

    • @wojciechkowalski7305
      @wojciechkowalski7305 4 месяца назад +22

      The problem is - what Valve is doing, is literally anti-competetive behaviour, that UOKiK has handed big fines (like 600 million PLN, which is ~150 million dollars kind of big) in last few years in other branches of the economy, from grocery supermarkets, to ISPs and GSM providers.
      And it's not a lawsuit, where Valve can bring their full team of lawyers - it's a government agency slapping you with administrative fine, and ordering you to remove that practice and mend the damage to affected customers/competition.
      And you can appeal ONLY through a very particular court that is heavily linked with said agency - in fact, the agency chief who just handed you the fine is the one you appeal to, and he is the one to forward your appeal to the court.
      UOKiK has been ridiculously heavy-handed in regards to any form of price fixing - they have just finally stumbled onto the clustermess that is digital games market, and with how one-sidedly those agreements are usually written out, they smelled blood in water.

    • @UltimaKeyMaster
      @UltimaKeyMaster 4 месяца назад +71

      @@wojciechkowalski7305 Valve isn't doing shit that's anti-competitive. Epic is.

  • @blakemidds
    @blakemidds 4 месяца назад +91

    The banning in Vietnam is almost pure corruption. Steam had for years an official partnership with VTC (a major local game publisher, the one you mentioned) and other Vietnamese payment methods (think Visa and mastercard like) in order for locals to purchase games. About 5 days before the ban, Steam did not want to renew the contracts with them thus they pushed the Govt to ban the platform (because they're all govt own/controlled entities). Another excuse from VN was taxes, Steam doesn't apply VAT (10% by law) which is a fair enough point itself BUT like I mentioned they had official partnerships with local banks and publishers etc. this means that they too were complicit in selling games without VAT...but it's fine if the local companies do it, but not the foreign one. No one here is chasing the fact that VTC et Al were selling games without the proper taxes.

    • @whitegoat1089
      @whitegoat1089 4 месяца назад +23

      Actually the government of VN has raised the tax for foreign businesses. It is now added 8% for selling tax and 5% tariffs. Thus yes, corruption.

    • @mercce6750
      @mercce6750 3 месяца назад +6

      And this is why as soon as possible, I'm moving out because in a country where even fucking gaming can be affected by corruption, like hell do I want to live here.

    • @explosion5022
      @explosion5022 3 месяца назад

      @@mercce6750 Ironic those bastards toss propagandas around like they care for the good of the people, when they hoard all the money and leave things in a shithole.

  • @MrCleks
    @MrCleks 4 месяца назад +251

    You guys are missing some big context here in Vietnam.
    Short story is that Vietnamese government is trying to invest big money again into the newly sprouting game industry. A substantial number of universities and private college-level schools here are implementing game design / game developing trainings to kick off the scene.
    It was, and probably still, speculated that this "censorship" move is actually Vietnamese government trying to weed off competing platforms like Steam from the market.
    Personally I think it's more complex than that, and the notion above is generally debunked by some leaked news that a major publisher in Vietnam - VNG - is going to partner with Epic Games to establish their platform here.
    The narrative is still being played out. This is really something you guys should keep an eye on, and I would be very glad if you do.

    • @JohnDoe-ds8um
      @JohnDoe-ds8um 4 месяца назад +49

      That sucks, they're basically gravitating to another Chinese backed company

    • @n9ne
      @n9ne 4 месяца назад +10

      Don't except anything less from a communist country

    • @ArawnOfAnnwn
      @ArawnOfAnnwn 4 месяца назад +32

      @@n9ne There's nothing communist about supporting businesses, albeit domestic ones. That's economic nationalism, not communism. The US, the poster child of capitalism, is itself increasingly doing that wrt China.

    • @ArawnOfAnnwn
      @ArawnOfAnnwn 4 месяца назад +9

      @@JohnDoe-ds8um They're not gravitating to the Chinese, they're trying to promote their own companies.

    • @mrzoinkyrogers328
      @mrzoinkyrogers328 3 месяца назад +6

      yeah im going to move to germany, sick of all these government bs now

  • @MocnyBrowarek
    @MocnyBrowarek 4 месяца назад +52

    People in Poland earn on average about 4000 zł/month. Now 1$ = about 4zł and 1Euro=4,5zł. Now... Steam has set game prices in Poland to be highest on the planet. So when you pay - lets say 60$ for a game - we in Poland pay about 80$. Is that fair? No - prices should be the same as in the rest of EU or even a little bit lower.
    Just so you know the whole story.

    • @3draven
      @3draven 4 месяца назад +17

      Yeah it gets even worse when they charge not $60 but $80 and up for the new ps5 ports (like ff7 remake which is around $86,46 after conversion).
      Image paying close to a 100 bucks for the base version of a game :/

    • @thefool8224
      @thefool8224 4 месяца назад +4

      my country is the same, the average earing per months are close to 1k dollars per month (or around 38k pesos).
      most big publishers completely dropped the regional pricings for their games years ago, konami had them higher here than in the US for a long time. but most indie devs are just chill with it and offer lower prices. GoG is the same in that regard, but not many devs want to have their games DRM free

    • @MocnyBrowarek
      @MocnyBrowarek 4 месяца назад

      @@thefool8224 GoG is the best. Not only they have more discounts and free games - but the prices are MUCH lower than on Steam - for the same game. And you don't have to worry with DRM...AND the game is yours.

    • @rodrigobogado8756
      @rodrigobogado8756 4 месяца назад +2

      that has nothing to do with Steam, the devs are the ones who put the prices, no Steam, this happens all the time in Latam

    • @MocnyBrowarek
      @MocnyBrowarek 4 месяца назад

      ​@@rodrigobogado8756 It has everything to do with Steam - because valve is converting the value of currency. They set PLN way below its value - so the prices are highest on the planet.

  • @DasArtyom
    @DasArtyom 2 месяца назад +7

    Dont forget we in poland pay more for games than in us, uk and others, even tho we earn like 1/3 of what average us citizens earn. Polish government should do something about that and not what they tried

  • @myrrmi
    @myrrmi 4 месяца назад +80

    Hi, Polish here :) the issue we have with Steam is that game prices (in local currency) are higher than in other EU countries, while our incomes are lower. Shucks :/

    • @jgih32
      @jgih32 4 месяца назад +2

      Take it up with the devs of those games, they are given to tools to adjust prices per Country.

    • @sumirejr1
      @sumirejr1 4 месяца назад +10

      Blame it on EU and people who using VPN to get cheaper prices. People with VPN make Valve do geo-blocking, but EU fines Valve for do geo-blocking and end up basically "EU Countries share prices with the country have the most expensive prices"

    • @MrQwertyman111
      @MrQwertyman111 4 месяца назад

      @@jgih32 Wrong.
      Steam gives recommendations regarding pricing for regions/countries under a given currency. Problem is, current exchange rate Valve provides to publishers is about 15% lower than the current one, while the prices are always adjusted to be just under the 60 euro cap for the EU zone. Effectively, this makes the games for Poland around 8-12% more expensive than in places where games are sold in Euro, despite purchase power of an average gamer in Poland being significantly lower due to lower incomes when compared to the Euro zone in general.
      Anyway, the issue is the conversion rate that Valve gives is about 2 years old when currency of Poland was very weak due to war in Ukraine breaking out, and has not been reviewed since. Now when our currency is back to its normal conversion rates to the Euro, we effectively pay more for games whenever a publisher decides to use Valves recommendations for regional pricing. And trust me, most publishers do use them.

    • @Darlf_Sevil
      @Darlf_Sevil 3 месяца назад +21

      ​@@sumirejr1you dont get it... We arledu accept we get the same price as rest of eu but bcs of out date steam price tool we pay literaly more like euro price is 24 eu what go to 104 pl but our price is 115 pl... And is still good i see things like +10 euro in our country. And it all valve calculator

    • @Darlf_Sevil
      @Darlf_Sevil 3 месяца назад

      ​@@jgih32yes steam have prices tool is most popular game calculator and is out date what make our prices worst.
      Most dev can do own research but dont do that until players say something.
      Why create a too when someone give you it for free, i can understend that.

  • @TekalNelmak
    @TekalNelmak 4 месяца назад +64

    wolfenstein and co are now "uncensored" in germany, at least the newer games, but all smaller game dev games that are adult only are locked away in Germany too. it would need a propper age check on steam to get those back.

    • @jacplac97
      @jacplac97 4 месяца назад +2

      Which sounds idiotic as hell. Germany uses PEGI rating, not ESRB. There is no direct equivalent of AO games in PEGI (+18 really only matches the M+17)

    • @ubrot7995
      @ubrot7995 4 месяца назад +13

      @@jacplac97 Germany does not use PEGI, we have our own rating system USK which does feature AO (18+).

    • @jacplac97
      @jacplac97 4 месяца назад +2

      @@ubrot7995 Huh. Ok, I have been corrected.

  • @ranzor0626
    @ranzor0626 3 месяца назад +60

    Polish guy here. Valve selling games for higher price is a fact. Let's for example say that that one dollar is worth 4 polish zloty so logic dictates that 30 dollar game should cost 120 polish zloty but Valve bumps the price and you have to pay 150 zloty and that is happening for years and the fact that our goverment is finally looking into it is not them messing with Valve for personal benefits but the simple fact that those slops in power in Poland are finaly doing something for polish people. You people are angry that 60 dollar games became 70 dollars imagine for a second that Valve just decide that game is worth 60$ but in US we will sell it for 70. Arbitrary pricing has to end

    • @mistyisacat8012
      @mistyisacat8012 3 месяца назад +8

      had to pay 92zł for a 20$ game, despite the 1$/4zł ratio, the game is really good, but it's annoying when that happens (esp since Omori is like 71zł rn and goes for the same price in $)

    • @ranzor0626
      @ranzor0626 3 месяца назад +1

      @@mistyisacat8012 exactly my point :( I'm sorry for you :(

    • @jacobgames3412
      @jacobgames3412 3 месяца назад +1

      As a Polish guy I agree too

    • @amogusgaming.6681
      @amogusgaming.6681 3 месяца назад +2

      Yep

    • @nephone
      @nephone 2 месяца назад +1

      It's not just games, Polish government just can't stand up to big corporations. Them racking up the prices (their excuse was the covid crisis, but they raised their prices way above what they needed to 'survive' the pandemic) was the main cause of inflation in recent years. And the government didn't do anything about it.

  • @mickey_mousey
    @mickey_mousey 4 месяца назад +449

    Well, if other launchers would allow me to import my ENTIRE steam library into their launcher without having to re-purchase every single videogame I own then sure I'll try another launcher, but other companies are being anti-competitive by trying to force you to repurchase games you already own just to use their launcher.

    • @musguera
      @musguera 4 месяца назад +21

      What you said doesn't make sense, it is like buying a game in PS and wanting to play it on Xbox. No store will ever do that.

    • @GwaihirScout
      @GwaihirScout 4 месяца назад +100

      GOG's launcher does this, with an extension. The store isn't better than Steam's, but I'll always buy DRM-free first.

    • @The_Cranky_Painter
      @The_Cranky_Painter 4 месяца назад +40

      The whole reason that I stopped playing Ubisoft games was because they wouldn't recognize my steam library of their products since my steam account was using a different email.

    • @GwaihirScout
      @GwaihirScout 4 месяца назад +67

      @@musguera GOG's launcher will trigger Steam to launch the game. If that's not enough for you, so be it.
      GOG tried to make a system to allow you to redeem a copy of a Steam game you owned on GOG's store, but next to no publishers were willing to participate so they had to shut that program down.

    • @Drebin2293
      @Drebin2293 4 месяца назад

      GOG tried doing this years ago with GOG connect. There's a problem with this though. Once you've imported your library to another service, then you have two separate copies of the game unless your copy on steam disappears. If it doesn't you now have an old account you can sell on the grey market. This is where things like NFTs could be brought to bear. When you purchased a game on any storefront, you could then have an NFT for that game stored on your digital wallet. Said NFT could allow you to access your game on the original storefront and any participating storefront for a nominal fee. The game would have to remain in your wallet for continued access and would only be able to be used by a single service at any given time. This would solve many problems. You could then sell the NFT of your game and transfer it to someone else. You wouldn't necessarily be beholden to a single company since the record is on the blockchain. Because steam is great right now, but what happens when Gabe dies? Who's to say the next owner won't turn it into a shit show or make the company public and enshitify the service? GOG Galaxy is currently the best launcher on that front because it can aggregate what you own across many storefronts, but it still requires you install the other launchers and go through those launchers to play your other games, so it isn't ideal.

  • @CryselleSilverwynd
    @CryselleSilverwynd 4 месяца назад +133

    The discovery features of Steam is a big part of why they don't want people to be selling at lower prices on other stores. Developers wanted to use Steam to market their game, sell the keys on their own website to avoid paying Valve, but then use Steam's distribution network to get the game to the customer. Which isn't a viable business model for Valve.

    • @FriedEgg101
      @FriedEgg101 4 месяца назад +18

      This seems very easy to understand, but for some reason nobody gets it lol

    • @MorbidEel
      @MorbidEel 4 месяца назад +11

      @@FriedEgg101 Except it is only true some of the time.
      - Sale by devs might still be selling Steam keys but it can also be something completely independent
      - GoG? They are probably not selling Steam keys and using Steam's network
      - EGS is definitely not going to be selling Steam keys or using Steam's network

    • @ferinzz
      @ferinzz 4 месяца назад +4

      Steam also has conditions in place to limit how many keys a dev can ask for.

    • @EkatariZeen
      @EkatariZeen 4 месяца назад +23

      @@MorbidEel The EGS poaching games with exclusivity deals when they were about to be released in mere days on Steam is literally the reason Steam updated their ToS and adopted that policy.

    • @CryselleSilverwynd
      @CryselleSilverwynd 4 месяца назад +5

      The problem is that there is no 'good' answer. The better they make things for the people just trying to do things as they're meant to, the easier it is for bad actors to screw everything over for everyone. The harder they come down on the bad actors, the worse everything is for the people who are just trying to use a service as designed. Anywhere they set the needle between the two extremes is going to be unthrilling for everyone involved, because nobody is going to like feeling punished because someone else can't behave.

  • @0x0404
    @0x0404 4 месяца назад +78

    "How dare you offer a service so good that others can't compete. You'd better make it worse or there will be consequences"

    • @Darlf_Sevil
      @Darlf_Sevil 3 месяца назад

      Gog exsist. Alos if you you have leukemia you not happy bcs all others have cancer. Better not good. And yet do you will pay more that evryone around you when they on top of that get more money ?

  • @177silas
    @177silas 3 месяца назад +6

    UOKiK in Poland is investigating the use/charging of players with higher prices than they should, following complaints from us (the players) about STEAM. There was a case of price increases due to inflation, but then prices remained high when inflation dropped, and even if the exchange rate was ~4:1 PLN:EUR, we had to pay like it was 5-6:1, which was an obvious violation. Steam quickly changed it after it got bigger, but the milk has already been spilled.

  • @Snowburden
    @Snowburden 4 месяца назад +39

    All the companies that tried to compete against Valve with their awful launcher, they never did what Valve does: (well at least at launch) Forums, social interactions, and all sorts of stuff. They launch in these bare-boned launchers that is a storefront and that's it. Nobody wants that. And as they added those features that folks love about Steam the damage and reputation has already been tarnished. Therefore, nobody will go to it.
    Essentially any "new" company that wants to launch a browser/storefront and gamers' actually give a shit about it. It has to launch day-1 (not EA, day 1) will EVERYTHING. Essentially the level of polish and manpower it would take to create a new Operating System. That's an insane task to take on. But honestly, if anything were to actually compete against Valve's Steam, it would have to be something that huge. Hell, even Microsoft can't do that, and they have all the money in the world. Yet, that truly doesn't mean shit these days.

    • @Psyche_TH
      @Psyche_TH 3 месяца назад

      Every time I read about praise for Steam's social features I find it quite funny, because even though they were acceptable for their time many years ago, nearly all of them are now redundant and do not make the platform more appealing to new users today. Having a friends list and being able to use that to join a game is basically the only thing that is needed. Everything else is done on Discord now (or on the dev/pub's own website, especially if the game is multi-platform). That is a whole other can of worms because Discord has many problems of its own, but it is undeniable that they are as big, if not bigger, in the instant messenger space as Steam is in gaming. Valve even made a half-hearted attempt to copy Discord by remaking Steam chat and turning it into a separate app on mobile, but it was (and still is) so lacking in features that it simply isn't worth using; Valve recognised this themselves and pretty much abandoned all work on it except for adding some new stickers every sale.
      And the Steam Workshop often isn't even the best place to get mods for Steam games, as there are websites that have better ranges and varieties of mods but aren't able to join the Steam download stream.
      Everything else like screenshots and guides is only still alive on Steam out of convenience, since those things are easily done by other websites but it's simpler for the user to just post directly to Steam.

  • @OnBrandRP
    @OnBrandRP 4 месяца назад +103

    Steam: We're not anti-competitive, we're just a better service.

    • @BlogingLP
      @BlogingLP 4 месяца назад +13

      Yes because they are and becuase steam was the first of it's kind platform and if you take a closer look except GOG every other steam like Platform is trash because they don't give a shit about the consumer so why should Steam be punished for being the best in it's field?

    • @laurencefraser
      @laurencefraser 4 месяца назад

      @@BlogingLP Even gog isn't really as good as steam in most respects, it just offers other significantly desirable features that steam doesn't in order to make up for it. ... which is to say it actively competes. Of course, then it runs into the problem that the very things that let it compete with steam at all are things that customers like but publishers Hate.

    • @user-uo8ny1kj4c
      @user-uo8ny1kj4c 3 месяца назад +1

      @@BlogingLP thank you, It's like twitter users shitting on misskey. If you don't like it, you can just use a shittier version.

  • @AdriusFrostglare
    @AdriusFrostglare 4 месяца назад +126

    I have invested literal thousands of dollars in my library, so I am going to watch this with mounting dread.

    • @issacadamson5263
      @issacadamson5263 4 месяца назад +22

      Part of purchasing a game means being allowed to own a private backup in case of any issues. Figuring out how to crack Steam's DRM or pirating the material you lawfully purchased so that you can have that backup is perfectly legitimate. Though I would still advise a VPN just to prevent grief.

    • @Otakumanu
      @Otakumanu 4 месяца назад +3

      If you live in Vietnam, you can use a VPN.

    • @Suzuki_Hiakura
      @Suzuki_Hiakura 4 месяца назад +11

      I have over a thousand worth of games I have never opened... still don't really regret it lol. Figure the company or government would be required to refund the players if they disabled the company and we lost access to our games... a bill that I am sure most would not want.

    • @Otakumanu
      @Otakumanu 4 месяца назад

      @@Suzuki_Hiakura This is what happens when you have totalitarian governments like in Vietnam. I have a feeling the government doesn't really care that it just nuked all the gamer libraries across the country rather than just disabling the ability to purchase games on steam.

    • @RockyAptera-xo3dd
      @RockyAptera-xo3dd 4 месяца назад +9

      What are you doing? Buying games new and not waiting for 70+% off sales?
      Who am I kidding. With an average under $5 /game I probably spent close to $1000 in the few years I've had my deck.

  • @wojciechkowalski7305
    @wojciechkowalski7305 4 месяца назад +20

    Just to add some more much needed context - UOKiK has been very heavily fighting in other markets with big companies forcing that sort of exclusive clauses onto smaller entities for last few years. And the fines they can give can be... quite astronomical, especially, if the clauses in question are not immediately reversed.
    Biggest supermarket chains in Poland are squealing under the weight of the fines already, and UOKiK is not stopping in slapping them with new fines.
    Also, considering the recent EU law changes combatting VAT tax evasion - the fines probably can be based on Steam's global revenue, and where the issue has been found to really severe, the fines can go as high as 10% of yearly revenue on top of my head. And now imagine rest of the EU's anti-consumer regulators who are now seeing a potential golden goose, all of which can probably drop similar style administrative fines.
    Yes - UOKiK does not sue - it hands you a fine, and your appeal process goes through them first, and very rarely gets to court.

    • @blackknight4152
      @blackknight4152 4 месяца назад

      Well it will get to court at EU level if necessary, then the EU resolutions would have to be managed by polish judges. Either way i think such a crazy approach to steam would just result in Steam pulling out of the country entirely.

    • @wojciechkowalski7305
      @wojciechkowalski7305 4 месяца назад +5

      ​@@blackknight4152 It doees not go to EU court yet - UOKIK hands a penalty and sanctions, and potential appeal goes through UOKiK to polish court of consumer and competition protection (meaning UOKiK has full access to company's appeal before the trial, since they are the ones submitting it to court - yes, that seems hella sus, but is real) and then the court decides the matter fully - from what I gathered, that is the end of appeal process, unless a company would be willing to convince Polish Supreme Court to pick up the case for nullification (good luck with that).
      Also, any clauses found by court in the agreement in violation of fair competition and consumer standards - by end of the trial they are added to UOKiK's official registty of forbidden cases (UOKiK can also interject into someone else's lawsuits to have clauses argued by parties added to registry). You can check the registry of banned clauses on UOKiK's website - they have thousands of them already, all is in text there, so could probably auto-translate if you really want to see some examples.
      As for pulling out of the market - highly doubt it - as I said before, Nintendo got scared of a Norway, which is much smaller country than Poland. And remember that pulling out of the country, because you have been found in violation of the local laws will cost Steam in refunds - the "we reserve right to cut the service with no refund for any reason" clause has been struck in its myriad forms so many times by UOKiK in the past, there is no doubt it would land Steam in even more hot water.
      To be fair, the case for why Steam is on the hook seems pretty clear to me, but I still have no idea, what was exactly that caused UOKiK to raid Sony's office - I presume it might be even bigger mess than Valve's dilemma right now.

    • @blackknight4152
      @blackknight4152 4 месяца назад

      @@wojciechkowalski7305 But i dont believe for a second that Poland can just strong arm Steam using a flawed judicial proccess honestly. I think polish courts can go as hard as they want, you understimate the ability of a company to cease all activity in a country. Besides the case would go quickly international and i would expect some EU reaction.
      EDIT: Also add that steam has already streamlined the proccess to grant refunds so the undertaking is nowhere near as crazy as you think it is. For starters steam store can just be blocked in Poland and consumers would still have access to all their purchases through a modified version of the Steam app. I think you over estimate what polish courts can really do to a multinational company.

    • @wojciechkowalski7305
      @wojciechkowalski7305 4 месяца назад

      ​@@blackknight4152 Am I? UOKiK has repeatedly forced giants like T-Mobile and Orange to comply with it's rulings - they know their pull, and as I said - price fixing and inequality in power in distribution contracts has been their pet peeve for few years now, so it is no surprise they came after Steam, if that clause it true, and it seems it is judging by it being mentioned in the court documents from all the Epic vs world suits.
      Is Steam the only one getting the bonk? Nope, they have raided Sony Office as well, probably due to the fact that Steam and PS Store by volume are most likely the biggest digital game/media store fronts present in the country.
      And if Steam decides to pull out of the country? Everyone will just VPN to German IPS - considering we are already paying rates only topped by Switzerland, it might actually be cheaper...
      That however, will not prevent Steam from getting fined, and UOKiK chief usually goes for top fines lately, and then sometimes lower it on appeal if the company shows good compliance with the ruling (fines go into hundreds of millions for big companies) - if Valve pulls out of Poland, and tries to appeal the fine, it would probably be viewed as obstinance, and any hope of fine getting reduced gets tossed out of the window.
      Digital apps/games market is one of the most anti-consumer sided ones out there - it finally started being noticed by authorities, so I expect only more scrutiny being placed.
      Game is a digital good as any other - why should Steam be allowed to dictate prices in other stores?
      And as I said - I expect this is only the beginning of more scrutiny towards the market as a whole - the perception that computer games are only "toys" with no value has finally died, so the Wild West market rules will have to quickly go, unless the publishers want to face severe repercussions.

    • @garbage2882
      @garbage2882 2 месяца назад +2

      @@blackknight4152 Poland is one of the biggest countries in the EU and has one of the highest numbers of users of Steam in the world behind the biggest countries in the world like China, USA, India, Russia, Brazil
      Pulling out of Poland because of a fine would cost them a lot, like to the point that you could see the numbers drop lot

  • @Y1NJ
    @Y1NJ 4 месяца назад +9

    Steam should forbid people to add the Tag "Souls-Like" because too many people think hard game = souls-like.

  • @michuXYZ
    @michuXYZ 3 месяца назад +7

    Buying products on Steam being a Polish citizen is kind of fucked up. Because They upped prices in Poland when the USD exhange rate was at an literal all time high period, and they never adjusted it back, the prices of games are so abnormally high for us, that when you sort price of some game on SteamDB, 80% of times the highest will be Poland and Israel, always higher than USD and EUR users. And for Israeli? Okay it MAYBE have common sense because it's high earning country, but Poland? It's GDP per capita PPP is slightly below EU average. What have this country done to you Steam, that games here cost more than in all EU states, US, Norway, Switzeland, Kuwait and UAE even??? Why is polish wallet being treated unequally than other wallets?

  • @DevilinGame
    @DevilinGame 3 месяца назад +3

    With steam the issue in Poland is the fact that we have the highest prices sometimes across the globe while germans have lower price and average income x4-10 time of what is in Poland.

  • @Mortiel
    @Mortiel 4 месяца назад +5

    User-generated tags have always been rather shite. I remember when Cyberpunk 2077 had the "masterpiece" tag before launch... It was neither helpful nor accurate lol.
    I said that the tags should be generated by the publisher but, and this is the key, *voted on by verified purchases when leaving a review* to ensure accuracy.

  • @SeruraRenge11
    @SeruraRenge11 4 месяца назад +42

    I get the argument of noncompetitive about stream...but it's not Valve's fault that every other alternative besides gog SUCKS. It's not just "oh I don't want more than one launcher to play my games from" because if you REALLY wanted to you could just set it up so that you launch those games from steam anyway, it's also because these stores are just objectively worse stores than steam. Whether it's a lack of features steam has had for a decade now, bad ui, or something else, steam is basically unchallenged because everyone else is seemingly unable to make a better moustrap. Now, I actually do think gog is better, but gog doesn't actually require you to use gog Galaxy (for most games anyway). You can just download and use standalone installers for games.

    • @Rietto
      @Rietto 4 месяца назад +14

      People honestly don't actually know what a 'free market' is. They cry for interference when they think it'll suit them, and get mat at interference when they don't like it. Hypocritical.

    • @UCmDBecUtbSafffpMEN3iscA
      @UCmDBecUtbSafffpMEN3iscA 4 месяца назад

      @@Rietto yeah it's basically projection for them at this point

    • @Darlf_Sevil
      @Darlf_Sevil 3 месяца назад

      ​@@Riettofree market still have rules and steam break them when fix problem is probady 1 day of 1 perspn work.

    • @Daniel_VolumeDown
      @Daniel_VolumeDown 3 месяца назад +1

      What games gog won't allow you to play wothout gog galaxy? I didn't knew that.
      I only knew games like WormsWMD where you can play without gog galaxy but you can't play online multiplayer. Not only that, but they actually hide option to play online multipayer if you don't have gog galaxy, so you can install the game and and not even know that you can play online (In my opinin game should have lan multiplayer but that is another rant).

    • @SeruraRenge11
      @SeruraRenge11 3 месяца назад +2

      @@Daniel_VolumeDown Pretty much, galaxy is needed for some online stuff and I think MAYBE an Asscreed game and that's about it.

  • @mugthemagpie3001
    @mugthemagpie3001 4 месяца назад +12

    I saw people pointing out the Polish average wage and while it is cool to do so, there is a small problem with that.
    Majority of people of Poland do not earn average wage and it is the wages of the rich social class which provides heavily into the Polish average wage.
    People over here in Poland earn something around 700 to 800 USD (post VAT, post tax, post healthcare deduction etc.) a month, which is already pretty far from the supposed average monthly wage in Poland that is somewhere around 1900 USD.
    But Steam doesn't really take that into consideration and on top of that we have higher prices than the rest of the EU due to us using the PLN but the very crux why we don't use Euro is what I said: majority of Poles BARELY earn 800-900 USD equivalence a month. Introduction of Euro would deepen the already massive wage gap as we do not have a middle class anymore.

    • @jgih32
      @jgih32 4 месяца назад +1

      Then take it up with the developers, Steam cant force them too change their prices by Country. The can only Provide Tools to do so. Currently the devs decide to Publish a game with a certain Price for their region (Mostly US) f, which gets converted onto the Regional currency. The Devs could change the Pricing per region as the tools from steam are there, but they dont.

    • @Rezlusiowa
      @Rezlusiowa 4 месяца назад +5

      ​@@jgih32 someone already contacted factorio dev and they said they won't change the price because they use steam conversion. If the steam conversion changes, the price for this game will change too. So tl;dr we've just been told: fu k you
      On the other side, devs for hades 2 and some other games changed the prices to accurate ones already. If you're willing, then you can get things done, easy as that.

    • @laurencefraser
      @laurencefraser 4 месяца назад +1

      @@Rezlusiowa Of course, Steam got hit by EU regulators and basically told it wasn't allowed to charge different prices in different parts of the EU, or something to that effect, just to make things messier.

    • @p_1945
      @p_1945 3 месяца назад

      ​@@laurencefraserbest thing that poland government or regulator can do is setup talk about review on that agreement exchange with valve can geo blocking as they should be.

  • @jjones503
    @jjones503 4 месяца назад +12

    They worry about steam but don't bat an eye at Google, Amazon, Microsoft, etc.

    • @ChrisWijtmans
      @ChrisWijtmans 4 месяца назад +2

      or samsung, which has been price fixing or you cant sell our product for decades. or miele and other vendors that bully small sellers.

    • @iplyrunescape305
      @iplyrunescape305 4 месяца назад +3

      because it isn't about being right or lawful, it's about who gives them their cut.

    • @Darlf_Sevil
      @Darlf_Sevil 3 месяца назад

      Pleas read where problem is, you talk abaut total difrent thing that we in Poland, is not like the other one dont exsist. But one problem at time and well amazon and microsoft are not that popular stores

  • @EnderElohim
    @EnderElohim 4 месяца назад +7

    5:38 Honestly Steam removing Turkish regional pricing was huge betrayal to us and i'm hope publisher are happy with the rise of piracy in Turkiye.

  • @WhatWillYouFind
    @WhatWillYouFind 4 месяца назад +48

    Playing and buying games from Vietnam. The crux of the Vietnam issue is that local gaming " mobile scams" from the gatcha duopolies want steam to bend a knee and it won't so the rich assholes over here are trying to pull it down. The other problem is steam isn't paying taxes. Sony also officially supports Vietnam and Playstation is huge here, but both companies have a peculiar business arrangement that will have massive growing pains. Vietnam used to be a massive piracy problem but steam properly converts regional pricing and has made gaming accessible to the new middle upper classes. It just sucks either way, Steam should pay taxes and NOTHING should change.

    • @laurencefraser
      @laurencefraser 4 месяца назад +4

      Makes one wonder why Steam isn't already paying applicable taxes, because they seem perfectly fine with paying taxes in other countries that decided their sales-tax-equivalent applied to digital retailers selling to people in that country.

    • @nguyenkhue4021
      @nguyenkhue4021 4 месяца назад

      @@laurencefraser Probably because they can get away with it in the past, just like Facebook

    • @ArariaKAgelessTraveller
      @ArariaKAgelessTraveller 3 месяца назад

      It's actually more complicated than simply not paying taxes
      Check other comments

  • @BlueWoWTaylan
    @BlueWoWTaylan 4 месяца назад +20

    Isn't what Poland investigating fits more what Epic is doing with their literal exclusivity bullshit?

    • @treemover7259
      @treemover7259 4 месяца назад +2

      Exclusivity is a legitimate business model,
      The problem that really exists in steam is devs can't go OK so on this store we would get more money so we are passing thar on to you as a pri e reduction

    • @azradun3903
      @azradun3903 4 месяца назад +10

      Pole here, I think this is some corruption. As I think Epic should be investigated first, not Steam.

    • @asdfadssf
      @asdfadssf 4 месяца назад +1

      Epic isn't a service provider with market dominance. Steam is. Simple as.

    • @azradun3903
      @azradun3903 4 месяца назад +11

      @@asdfadssf Steam doesn't have exclusive distribution agreements. Epic has.
      Steam wasn't caught spying on a competitor's installation folder. Epic was.
      Steam wasn't trying to undercut the competitors by giving away freshly released products for free. Epic was.

    • @Northerner-Not-A-Doctor
      @Northerner-Not-A-Doctor 3 месяца назад +3

      @@azradun3903 none of this are breakings of Polish law. You can give stuff for free in Poland, you can have exclusive distribution agreements.
      Abusing dominant market position is.
      Unexplained selling product for higher prices in one EU country than in another is.

  • @LOBricksAndSecrets
    @LOBricksAndSecrets 4 месяца назад +10

    If Steam can display overall and recent user reviews separately, then it shoupd be able to also display developer and user submitted tags separately.
    [EDIT/Addendum]: I think Steam should also have a Review that does not count as positive or negative, and is something like "I just want to give important Information"

    • @Aeroxima
      @Aeroxima 4 месяца назад

      Agreed, sometimes I just want to post info. Some would say there's discussion boards for it, but that's not really a replacement, also neutral reviews are a thing.

    • @Yoshi278
      @Yoshi278 4 месяца назад

      You see, Steam and Valve are incredibly static. Most of the time they change anything (especially for the better) is when external forces make them change something.

  • @muttnt
    @muttnt 2 месяца назад +3

    i like the fact that we in Poland earn 1/3 if not 1/2 of what minimum wage is in germany for example but we pay on steam like 30% more

  • @FrostsorrowGaming
    @FrostsorrowGaming 4 месяца назад +43

    steam gives games a place to live not just be sold.. offers community forums, mod support built in, reach a larger customer base, other store fronts are not like this at all.. hell epic store can't even keep a consistent UI between their store and cart.

    • @OneofInfinity.
      @OneofInfinity. 4 месяца назад +9

      Don't forget the workshops, a place to find mods for your title, where u can even interact with the mod maker and others using it.

    • @Psyche_TH
      @Psyche_TH 3 месяца назад

      These are features that only provide a worthwhile benefit if your game is only on PC or only on Steam to begin with. Any multi-platform game would just find its community getting splintered if they put any real effort into engaging with Steam's miscellaneous side. Even though Discord is far from perfect, it's way better and way more common for that to be the central hub of discussion around a game, and if necessary the developer or publisher uses their own website to host a forum or official announcements if Discord's way of doing that isn't suitable for them. Or they create, may God have mercy on their souls, a subreddit.
      I don't know much about the technical side of how Workshop mod support functions, but the convenience is really the only selling point it has over using a mod website like GameBanana or Nexus which are usually better in every other way.
      I suppose the only ace in the hole that Steam's unholy amalgamation of all these features has is that they're able to be pushed to the player as a blend with the game experience rather than being a separate app or website. That's basically it. They don't do anything better, they just do it more overbearingly. I wish they did do it better, and I especially wish they would make Steam chat and discussion boards worth using, but it's just not like that these days.

  • @twpthewyrdrockproject7676
    @twpthewyrdrockproject7676 4 месяца назад +51

    Microsoft, Meta, Apple, EA, Ubisoft, Sweet Baby Inc, Disney, Blackrock, Vanguard, and literaly almost every other corpo destroying thousands of smaller companyes and doing literally the worst things possible to the customers > "Nothing to se here"
    Valve treats it's custommers with dignity > "Now you've done it! 😡"
    The bad guys won, didn't they?

    • @lycanwarrior2137
      @lycanwarrior2137 4 месяца назад +16

      A lot of the things gamers complain about in the AAA space (digital-only, DRM, "play-to-earn", lootboxes, actual GAMBLING, etc.) was pioneered by Valve/Steam, oddly enough.
      Steam had to be SUED by the Australian government to allow refunds.
      This is also the same company that successfully appealed a ruling that would've allowed customers to resell digital games.
      Super consumer-friendly company though! /sarc

    • @maxnum1sgameclub263
      @maxnum1sgameclub263 4 месяца назад

      Nah they never won never had a chance, they gave into broke before they had a chance. They will implode financially before the ever got they chance to win. We are winning not because the industry is getter better, but its collapsing to build up better!

    • @Ylyrra
      @Ylyrra 4 месяца назад +5

      That other companies are trying to dictate the standard (and failing because they don't have the market dominance) to do worse doesn't make Steam right. It only makes them "not as bad". Or perhaps they're actually worse, because they've already successfully set the expectations so thoroughly that you don't even question them, they're just "that's the way it is".
      Also, anti competitive and anti consumer are not the same thing. A company can be both pro consumer and anti competitive, which only indirectly leads to anti consumer results in a "but our hands are clean!" kind of way.

    • @Anakondrai
      @Anakondrai 3 месяца назад +3

      As a tf2 fan I can say that Valve doesn't treat their customers with dignity at all. Steam is cool but Valve is not and even the worst companies wouldn't allow for their own game to be in such bad state as tf2.

    • @nono-yw3tv
      @nono-yw3tv 3 месяца назад

      @@lycanwarrior2137 This is like the third time you copied this exact comment. On that grounds I'm going to completely disregard your argument.

  • @MoreImbaThanYou
    @MoreImbaThanYou 4 месяца назад +12

    I prefer Steam having a strong position in the market than pretty much any other company in the games industry.

    • @muysli.y1855
      @muysli.y1855 3 месяца назад

      Until steam change its policy and you start complaining

  • @hubertrozalski7070
    @hubertrozalski7070 2 месяца назад +3

    I don't want to pay 350 PLN for a game that's worth no more than 200 PLN. Steam uses outdated currency indexes.

  • @RookMeAmadeus
    @RookMeAmadeus 4 месяца назад +7

    The main reason Steam is in such a powerful position is nobody TRIED to properly compete with them for years. Now, the people who try are doing a godawful job of it.
    EGS is losing money hand over fist. It only continues to exist because Epic has the infinite money printer known as the Unreal Engine to fuel it. EA/Origin? Completely laughable setup, basically limited almost entirely to EA games, and lacks basic functionality Steam's had for years. Ubisoft? They could POSSIBLY be a credible threat if they ever actually got some good new games on their platform...
    Steam had a good decade of being effectively uncontested to get things right. It's not perfect, but nobody else is even CLOSE.

  • @skywalker6119
    @skywalker6119 4 месяца назад +13

    9:30 Why would you let someone advertise their product on your marketplace, the biggest in the world, but then let another marketplace develop the reputation for selling games for 10-20% less? It makes sense for Valve to say that publishers can't undercut the steam price on other stores.

    • @smidlee7747
      @smidlee7747 4 месяца назад

      Valve should have a say on what games they want on their store just like publishers like Ubisoft can decide their game can only be bought through their store.

    • @laurencefraser
      @laurencefraser 4 месяца назад +9

      It gets even better. Apparently the restriction isn't even on selling the game cheaper elsewhere... it's on selling Steam Keys for the Steam Version Of The Game cheaper elsewhere.

    • @BirbIrl
      @BirbIrl 4 месяца назад

      @@laurencefraser yep. it's only for keys.

  • @joakim8579
    @joakim8579 4 месяца назад +34

    Anti-competativ? I don't think so, I would say that Steam is the only not shit game store

    • @BloodwyrmWildheart
      @BloodwyrmWildheart 4 месяца назад +9

      Steam is DRM. GOG is DRM-free.

    • @joakim8579
      @joakim8579 4 месяца назад

      @@BloodwyrmWildheart First, idk what GOG is. Secondly, I don't want 8 diffrent stores for my games. Third, I would rather pay than have to use any of the alternatives that I know of.

    • @maninredhelm
      @maninredhelm 4 месяца назад +9

      @@joakim8579 The sentiment you're expressing is precisely the problem. Having achieved that userbase critical mass, it is impossible to compete with Steam except on value, which Steam will not allow even though other storefronts charge developers lower fees to list their games. The claim everyone makes that this is all because Steam has a better store is a load of crap. Most people would not pay $10 extra on every single game to keep it on Steam, yet the developer makes the same amount of money selling a $50 game on Epic that it makes selling a $60 game on Steam. They're just not allowed to sell it for $50 on Epic or they'll get banned from Steam, all so Steam can take your $10 while contributing nothing to the quality of the game.

    • @joakim8579
      @joakim8579 4 месяца назад +2

      @@maninredhelm They will not het banned lol, there is no rule in the Steam guidelines for devs not to be able to sell their game else where. Also, if you honestly think the fucking Epic store of all things is in any way not a shit show... I pity you. Also ironic you are mentioning Epic since they have bought the exclusive right to multible games for large sums of money, in exchange for having the game only on their platgorm for the first couple of years, who is anti.competative now? Also the games most of the time sold better on steam since noone want to use that godforsaken shitshow of a store

    • @doctorspook4414
      @doctorspook4414 4 месяца назад +6

      @@BloodwyrmWildheart Steam offers the game dev/publisher the choice whether to be DRM or DRM-Free!
      So your sentence is an absolute lie!

  • @Luckyleol
    @Luckyleol 4 месяца назад +16

    Steam not wanting to be undercut in sales and preventing it makes sense. In a brick and mortar it is under the stores jurisdiction to adjust their prices of products. On steam the devs/publishers set the price. Steam also has costs in hosting, advertising and distributing the game, they would be more negatively effected by being undercut and unable to compete on price because they can't lower the price of the product.

    • @daptrius4983
      @daptrius4983 4 месяца назад +16

      Except that is not even Steam's policy. Steam does not care if you charge less on other platforms, they care if you sell Steam Keys for less on other platforms.
      You should use Steam Keys to sell your game on other stores in a similar way to how you sell your game on Steam. It is important that you don’t give Steam customers a worse deal than Steam Key purchasers.

  • @mercce6750
    @mercce6750 3 месяца назад +3

    What pissed me off the most about Steam being banned in Vietnam is that they didn't announce jack. It was the worst possible move that the VTC (which is probably a monopoly in itself) and Vietnamese ISPs could have done that there is no way corruption wasn't involved. I only found out through third party gaming news channel on RUclips because like I said, there were no announcement. They made it seemed like they were threwing a hissy fits over not getting their cut, which is in no way the PR move you are supposed to do, even if the reason is justified or not.
    I just hate being a gamer in Vietnam so much. There has been many game that I had to access through other means other than the Google Play or App store because they banned most of the games I play or want to play (most likely due to no one wanting to pay the absurd tax rate) so even if I am able to play those games, I'm unable to support the developers. And now with Steam gone, it's the last straw.

  • @KiraYoshikage-vz3vd
    @KiraYoshikage-vz3vd 2 месяца назад +4

    in Poland there are petitions to make the cost lower

  • @masterkutai
    @masterkutai 4 месяца назад +5

    The thing is they want every game to go through the approval process of the country, which they themselves have to go through. This is not about blocking any single game, but every other game has to go through gatekeeping like they have to.
    The problem is, if any Vietnam devs want to go global, they can’t go through Steam anymore, which is even worse for the devs.
    The only party that benefits, are the devs of existing gacha games. There is no games that is based on a single sale that can reach revenue scale as gacha games with just a very small market size.
    And let’s face it, the size of the market does not justify creating any new live service games just for vietnam.

  • @whoahanant
    @whoahanant 4 месяца назад +16

    A major reason why steam is so liked by consumers and a large chunk of devs is that they don't typically buy out IPs/dev teams only to dismantle them or run them into the ground. Other publishers take a far more control freak approach to all of this in comparison to Steam. There's issues with it yes, there always is issues with everything in the world, but in comparison to other publishers the damage is really not as impactful to both dev teams and consumers.
    Not to mention Steams storefront is so damn massive in comparison to other publishers who, again, take the control approach and lock games to their platforms/sites whereas if you throw your game on Steam it reaches far across the world fast. It just works better for everyone. It's easier for everyone. No wonder the competitors can't even hold a candle.

  • @TFAric
    @TFAric 4 месяца назад +19

    Would this not mean that "epic" games should be banned in Poland.
    I would be for a an ban of their store in the EU.

    • @fucku2b
      @fucku2b 4 месяца назад

      I agree that this is a "double measure"
      BUT I think Epic Games Launcher is good for the game market

    • @Forgetthereality
      @Forgetthereality 4 месяца назад +9

      It existing is a good thing but holy fuck if egs itself wasn't an absolute piece of shit software

    • @simplysmiley4670
      @simplysmiley4670 4 месяца назад +11

      With their exclusivity deals meant to brute force their way into being the monopoly themselves while providing a terrible service to customers? Fuck no.
      Only store that has a comparable service to Steam's, by which I mean, it doesn't fuck over the customers, is GOG and only because of it's lack of DRM meaning games bought on GOG are yours for good.

    • @TFAric
      @TFAric 4 месяца назад

      I don't know how they existing is a good thing. How many studios and publishers have lost respect and sales because of the egs?
      In the end it is just Chinease spyware with an CEO that thinks he is Jesus.

    • @TFAric
      @TFAric 4 месяца назад

      @@simplysmiley4670 I would not mind competition to Steam, GOG is great and I do use it, it might have lost a few sales recently from me as I am planning on a Steam Deck and I want easy access to those games.

  • @KAKUN_DESU
    @KAKUN_DESU 3 месяца назад +6

    the swastika isn't just a hindu symbol. many many nations snd cultures used it. The one germany used is an ancient germanic rune. So old, they didn't even know india existed back then.

  • @rrc3
    @rrc3 4 месяца назад +4

    Valve can absolutely cut deals with larger publishers. They already do. Other developers can't do that because they aren't larger publishers. The end.

  • @thegreatlemmon7487
    @thegreatlemmon7487 4 месяца назад +6

    there deal where they can hit 80% to 90% for triple A games, is so unheard of. steam is one of these company's i would glad let take the wheel in leading

    • @plcdfa
      @plcdfa 4 месяца назад

      unheard of? Literally every other store does those, or better. EGS, GOG, Humble... Steam has the best selection and best client, but not the best sales, by any means.

  • @aviatedviewssound4798
    @aviatedviewssound4798 4 месяца назад +3

    They don't like it when a private company has too much power; it threatens the shareholders.

  • @majesticslug3399
    @majesticslug3399 4 месяца назад +4

    Since when is offering a better service than everyone else illegal? Meanwhile Walmart has ruined communities for decades

  • @Dadgrammer
    @Dadgrammer 4 месяца назад +13

    Polish Gamer here, I’m glad that government controller are looking on stem, mostly because nonsense currency conversion rate, that we’ve biggest prices on games on the world 😂 I hope this will be solved.
    In Poland we’ve kinda unique situation, because lat 20 years of high-tech evaluation here, we have actual huge companies competition, and we really like it. For steam we’ve gog, for eBay/Amazon we’ve allegro, for DHL/fedex etc we’ve InPost and parcel machines, our banking with blik are competitive to master card/visa as convenient alternative way to pay.

    • @FitzChivalryFarseer2
      @FitzChivalryFarseer2 4 месяца назад

      That sounds damn awesome especially with the MasterCard Visa Monopoly and with POS Amazon actively murdering its competition and hosting fake sales that you can see if you install a add on that tracks prices of products on Amazon and see bullshit like a huge spike in price for an hour and then a "sale" at higher or same price it already was

  • @Zectifin
    @Zectifin 4 месяца назад +3

    I have a lot of beef with Steam's recommendation system lately. First, the user tags are generally a good thing, but some of it really annoys me both in that Steam themselves will remove "negative" tags that would be very useful, like they removed "asset flip" and "mobile port" in the first few weeks of the tag system. Plus the with the Bulwark story, when people add tags for something that isn't in the game. I've seen so many "roguelike/roguelite" tags for games that have a little bit of procedural generation or randomization, but aren't roguelikes/lites. Just because a game has randomized levels after death doesn't mean they are roguelikes.
    Second is with the recommendations themselves. I remember years ago the "more games like this" section being very accurate. Now when I go to it, it seems to only recommend newer games or ones that are in a vaguely similar category. There are so many games that are a "clone" of something and basically the same game with slight changes in mechanics and graphics, and instead it recommends something insanely left field, and no matter how many times I refresh the page it will not recommend the game that inspired the game I'm looking at, but will recommend something almost completely unrelated. I get it when the game is very unique and way out of left field, but when I'm looking at a metroidvania I expect ti to recommend Metroidvanias like it used to, now I'm getting top down roguelikes and puzzle platformers. In a genre thats super oversaturated on Steam it should be recommending everything from that genre/subgenre. Same goes for the "because you played" section, it has the same issue.
    Overall its better than any other storefront, I just have some criticism for something I love.

  • @_Trinima_
    @_Trinima_ 4 месяца назад +3

    Valve doesn't have an "unfair advantage". Everyone who has ever tried to compete is just bad.

  • @Evamme534
    @Evamme534 3 месяца назад +4

    Steam isn't anti competitive, they're very competitive and win every competition!

  • @Yoshi278
    @Yoshi278 4 месяца назад +4

    Just a reminder to everyone: Steam isnt pro-consumer, infact they have a lot of anti-consumer issues, its just that every other competitor minus one or two are so irredeemably anti-consumer that it makes Steam win by virtue of doing nothing.

  • @badluck7286
    @badluck7286 3 месяца назад +3

    Jestem prostym Polakiem - Widzę flagę Polski > Klikam.

  • @royconestoga7326
    @royconestoga7326 4 месяца назад +22

    If other companies weren’t garbage, maybe they’d stand a chance. Guess it’s much easier to drag others down into the shite instead of elevating yourself.

  • @Mortiel
    @Mortiel 4 месяца назад +4

    I could be mistaken because I'm not a dev/publishers and therefore don't know the actual details, but I thought Steam's price restrictions was for *steam keys*, essentially saying you can't sell steam keys elsewhere for less than the price the game is charging on Steam itself... Which made perfect sense to me.
    Again, I could be complete wrong there and it's a different story if it's not only steam keys.

    • @noisyash4234
      @noisyash4234 3 месяца назад +2

      It does only apply for steam keys

    • @Azarilh
      @Azarilh 2 месяца назад +1

      Yep. People are misunderstanding it.

  • @Talon97
    @Talon97 4 месяца назад +8

    Petty jealousy, nothing more. All these other platforms are jealous of Valve's success. Perhaps if they actually catered to their customers more they wouldn't have these problems.

  • @unironicallydel7527
    @unironicallydel7527 4 месяца назад +16

    Steam definitely isnt anti-competitive, its just that all the competitors either suck or aren't trying to be competitive in the case of GoG. Epic Games tried to be a steam competitor. But their storefront absolutely sucks.

    • @SpottedHares
      @SpottedHares 4 месяца назад +1

      Yeah, you didn’t give a reason why steam is an anti-competitive.

    • @p_1945
      @p_1945 3 месяца назад

      I think one big thing that steam set apart from other stores is thier ecosystems which unlikely no one can do it better than them as other company is found as public company so lot of pressure like to make them do short term goal as always instead of steam which is private company can do thing in scope of long term.
      In the end , literally no one can be compete as others focus on build the store with sort of quick grab profits tactics or massive cut the price for dominate market and take all money back after they're 1st in the market apart from that they didn't care anything else at all.

    • @unironicallydel7527
      @unironicallydel7527 3 месяца назад

      @@SpottedHares Give a reason why it is? Or do you not know one?

  • @KaAl-y4q
    @KaAl-y4q 4 месяца назад +4

    a thought that always bothered me is what will steam become after gabe, which hopefully is a long long time away

    • @Azarilh
      @Azarilh 2 месяца назад

      His son will inherit it prolly.

  • @dragongerman3822
    @dragongerman3822 Месяц назад +1

    As someone in Vietnam who plays Steam, it’s not fully banned, the Steam Store rn is the only thing that is banned however all your previously downloaded games are fine. The firewall is also piss easy to get pass with a free VPN. Fun fact: I have bought multiple games with the VPN on while in Vietnam and I wasn’t banned .

    • @Whatareyoudoinginmyswamp.
      @Whatareyoudoinginmyswamp. Месяц назад +1

      You right I'm use vpn (warp 1111) and I still can buy and download game easily (Steam just banned vpn if you change it in a specific place and you use it to buy game cheaper)

  • @binheve
    @binheve 3 месяца назад +1

    I come from, Vietnam, I have been saving up money for over a year to finally buy games, then steam got banned, out of the blue

  • @diegosilang4823
    @diegosilang4823 4 месяца назад +5

    Steam is so convenient and has the highest brand loyalty.

    • @BloodwyrmWildheart
      @BloodwyrmWildheart 4 месяца назад +1

      "Brand loyalty" is a bad thing.

    • @Aeroxima
      @Aeroxima 4 месяца назад +1

      @@BloodwyrmWildheart Maybe in the sense of being blindly loyal, but being a person or company that has earned it probably says something positive.

  • @larkendelvie
    @larkendelvie 4 месяца назад +14

    Sheesh - remember when PC gaming was dead? Personally as a die hard PC gamer I thank Valve. Edited to add /s, sheesh people.

    • @BloodwyrmWildheart
      @BloodwyrmWildheart 4 месяца назад +4

      PC gaming was never dead. You clearly have a very limited PC gaming history.

    • @laurencefraser
      @laurencefraser 4 месяца назад

      @@zerobytey It wasn't. but there was a period where the market wasn't growing much while the console market was booming, mostly due to the price of the hardware needed to run new games on either platform, and so of course all the publishers that are overly fixated on maximum short term profit did what they usually do... Then the market changed again, as it does.

  • @mrszczurek
    @mrszczurek 2 месяца назад +1

    As Polish: Do I think Steam is anti-competitive? Hell no.
    Do I think the prices of games are on the high side? Yes.
    To be honest, if my government could negotiate for the prices to go down a little bit, it would be awesome.

  • @yuridhjeeyn9034
    @yuridhjeeyn9034 3 месяца назад +1

    "can't sell it cheaper on other plaforms" doesn't mean that the developer cannot sell the game for whatever price they want
    it means that if you lower your price in another store, then you also have to lower it on steam, ergo: you can still lower the price as much as you want
    you just have to have the same price everywhere (or at least not undercut steam)
    isn't that just exacltly how it works with books? at least in some euopean countries there are laws that say that the price of a book has to be the same no mater in which shop you buy it, as in "don't undercut prices in another shop"
    being alowed to undercut would allow you to do market manipulation, as in BigFirm1 pays a lot of developers to sell their games cheaper on their website, in order to kill their competition to then create a monopoly

  • @steel5897
    @steel5897 4 месяца назад +3

    We may get to find out if Reddit's love for the EU's anti free market policies is stronger than their unconditional love for Steam and Valve, who can do no wrong.

    • @p_1945
      @p_1945 3 месяца назад

      Sometime regulator interpret or imply definition in the law too strict and somehow didn't realise effect that it will be happened afterward or they know since very start and act like no clue as they're got lobby by corporate or they can't speak thier own mind as doing job as regulator.

  •  4 месяца назад +12

    If a game is available on PC, it should be available on all stores. To get more customers, the stores then have to improve their services around the games.

    • @AzureWiler
      @AzureWiler 4 месяца назад +3

      welp go tell that to EPIC store, Steam doesn't do that

    • @simplysmiley4670
      @simplysmiley4670 4 месяца назад +2

      And at the moment, all the other stores don't give a singular flying fuck about providing a good service to their customers, at all. They all just want to get as much money for as little effort. While Steam settled itself over the years with a fairly good service, not the best, but by far better then what others have to offer atm.
      Only GOG has anything going for it, with lack of DRM of any kind on their store, which at the same time means most publishers do not want anything from them being put on GOG because it doesn't give them full control over the game at all times.

    • @Jinkypigs
      @Jinkypigs 4 месяца назад

      And nothing stop publisher from listing on all store, steam don't restrict them. Unlike epic who buys exclusives and even refuse some indies from listing because they refuse the exclusive deal

  • @seriade
    @seriade 4 месяца назад +9

    The problem is steam is an oligopoly not a monopoly. Like other oligopoly it has certain protections that monopoly's do not given the market is so small in terms of overall competitors their main being epic and Microsoft. The advantage steam has unlike those 2 is that it does not pay companies to keep their games off other platforms'.

    • @simplysmiley4670
      @simplysmiley4670 4 месяца назад +6

      And actually provides a palatable service.
      EGS, Microsoft and etc. barely care about providing a functioning service, let alone something that's comparable to Steam's.
      Only store that isn't Steam and doesn't fuck over customers is GOG with their lack of DRM on games, which also makes it so most publishers do not want anything to do with them.

    • @lucidnonsense942
      @lucidnonsense942 4 месяца назад

      Oligopoly, i.e. run by old men? Well, I guess...

    • @seriade
      @seriade 4 месяца назад +1

      @@lucidnonsense942 cambles soup is an example of an oligopoly. While anyone can make soup its just cheaper to have cambels make the soup for you. Steam is the same way.

    • @ChrisWijtmans
      @ChrisWijtmans 4 месяца назад

      steam dominates the pc gaming market, that makes it a monopoly.

  • @rootnon
    @rootnon 4 месяца назад +1

    One of the things to consider about steam restricting prices on other retailers is if steam isn't allowed to restrict pricing, than a company like epic can sell a game on both apps but overprice it on steam essentially using steams promotional acumen to promote a game for a different retailer.

  • @KamikazeMedias
    @KamikazeMedias 3 месяца назад +2

    7:34 - No, whatever is not threatening german bottomline is not an EU issue. If it does threaten german bottomline it is eu issue. and yes, as a Pole living in Poland: EU is germany. basically. To give you idea of the power dynamics.

  • @silentbilly7971
    @silentbilly7971 4 месяца назад +24

    The thing is anything pro consumer is anti competitive like there is a reason the majority of pc gamers only use steam its the best market place basically netflix but as store front for games because no store front is good compared to it and its been around longer

    • @BloodwyrmWildheart
      @BloodwyrmWildheart 4 месяца назад +3

      DRM isn't pro-consumer.

    • @Captain.Mystic
      @Captain.Mystic 4 месяца назад +1

      @@BloodwyrmWildheart Steams drm is optional and completely in control by the devs. Steam provides an option but factorio shows that a dev can do basically anything with a users key as long as they provide a worthwhile service.
      Anyone who still uses steams drm either decided to stay opted in because they didnt care to make their own drm service, or didnt feel like loosening DRM restrictions in place of something like wubes login system. In other words, steam provides a tool but its not a requirement to market on their store.

    • @blackknight4152
      @blackknight4152 4 месяца назад +1

      @@BloodwyrmWildheart I have many steam games with 0 DRM. I can launch the apps/games without steam being open, but my played time isnt tracked then. This is not the case to most games, as obviously a slight amount of DRm is kind of necessary to protect the software, but you can always launch steam in offline mode and play the games, here is where the devs add aditional DRM, like total war needing an online ping every 48 hours esentially making the games forever online.

    • @Yoshi278
      @Yoshi278 4 месяца назад

      Sick of people parroting the same "Steam allows devs to turn off DRM" BS. Besides the fact only a fraction of games take advantage of it, great, you still don't own the game you purchased, you still can't install it without Steam everytime, you are still at the devs mercy if they decide to update the game and remove content or break it with a new update (anytime Bethesda updates their games).
      Buy games on Itch, GOG and other platforms if you can help it. Since valve doesn't care about preservation or ownership.

  • @teinmeizeshi5209
    @teinmeizeshi5209 4 месяца назад +13

    Anti-competitive behaviour:
    Better customer service than everyone else.

    • @Otakumanu
      @Otakumanu 4 месяца назад +2

      @@zerobytey I'm curious, what do you think this anti-competitive behavior is?

    • @zerobytey
      @zerobytey 4 месяца назад +3

      @@Otakumanu Here is just a small list from the top of my head:
      - the Most Favored Nation Clause (you can never sell your game any cheaper on any other platform than on Steam)
      - High Revenue Share
      - Market Dominance
      - Exclusive Distribution Agreements
      - Housing of digital restrictions on games
      - Complete control over discounts
      Just these points make Steam pretty anti-competitive for me.

    • @Otakumanu
      @Otakumanu 4 месяца назад +6

      @@zerobytey 1st: This is untrue. You can actually sell your game cheaper on other platforms if you want. The inability to sell your game for a lower price or a discount without doing the same on Steam is restricted to steam keys. Basically, you cannot sell a _Steam_ game any cheaper on any other platform than on Steam.
      2nd: The 30% revenue share is largely standard for many platforms. You can argue that it was always too high and should be lower, but regardless this isn't exclusive to Steam or them being anti-competitive. Rather stores that have lower revenue shares are simply more competitive in this regard. If you ask me, the share should be lower for indies and small companies and remain at 30% for large corporations.
      3rd: Steam's market dominance is not by itself anti-competitive. Steam's market share comes from the fact most people want to use it, not because there are no alternatives.
      4th: Could you please elaborate on this one? Are we talking EGS-style exclusives or something else?
      5th: Is this referring to DRM?
      6th: Untrue, the publisher or developer chooses when to and by how much to discount their game(s).

    • @teinmeizeshi5209
      @teinmeizeshi5209 4 месяца назад +3

      @@zerobytey How is 30% cut anti competitive? It's giving more than enough opportunity to other platforms to take LESS than 30%.
      Market dominance come from customer preferance. The most consumed beverage is coffee, is coffee anti competitive against tea or soda?
      Exclusive distribution? Give a single example of a AAA or even AA game that signed an exclusivity deal with steam. It's the opposite, Epic store died bcs every PC player hated their exclusivity deals.
      Complete control over discounts? Really? Steam is the platform that sells games, they are literally responsible for selling games.
      Damn, how dare those supermarkets make discounts to their products, the factories didn't consent to that!

    • @BloodwyrmWildheart
      @BloodwyrmWildheart 4 месяца назад +1

      How is DRM "better customer service", exactly?

  • @theshadowdirector
    @theshadowdirector 4 месяца назад +3

    I'm curious what will happen with console game storefronts once physical copies no longer exist because it's the only thing keeping competition active for game pricing on said platforms. I imagine Microsoft will be the first to attempt digital only so they may be the test case.

    • @Someone-lg6di
      @Someone-lg6di 4 месяца назад

      Ps5 xbox s s digital consoles

  • @henrybubu_
    @henrybubu_ 3 месяца назад +1

    Hi, I'm a Vietnamese citizen. I've used Steam for a while. Steam isn't banned. It's just network providers blocked the steam domain. Changing DNS and VPN still works. We're all quite mad.
    (Also Steam is pretty nice here since there's a big discount from USD to VND)

  • @CazaliEiben
    @CazaliEiben 4 месяца назад +2

    $team being invested for anti-competitive practices by merely a single country is the biggest issue. That should be done by many, MANY more countries.

  • @ito2789
    @ito2789 4 месяца назад +8

    Crybaby competitive companies basically bitching cause they want more money and are incompetent to innovate.

    • @SunShine-xc6dh
      @SunShine-xc6dh 4 месяца назад

      They want more money by wanting to be able to sell thier games for less on other places? Sounds like the getting robbed by steam

  • @deuswulf6193
    @deuswulf6193 4 месяца назад +7

    Valve is a type of Monopoly. Absolute Monopolies are extremely rare, and Valve does not have an absolute one. They do however have a monopolist position or what's called a market monopoly, which usually has some conditions to trigger. One of them is the ability to influence or control the market and or pricing. The other aspect is less with Valve themselves, but the users. The userbase has generally given and enforced Valve's position as well, often by refusing to even use a competitor even if they offer lower prices. In some instances, even black listing a game if it has a timed exclusive on a competing platform.

    • @ceu160193
      @ceu160193 4 месяца назад +4

      Because competitors try to lure customers with low prices, but without providing all services Steam has. So customers come, see no workshop, no community, no other services they got used to on Steam and go back.

    • @lifegrain6092
      @lifegrain6092 4 месяца назад +2

      it's hard to not choose steam when the other options are objectively worse experience/products
      i don't need pc game platform launcher number 94 that only has store, library, user settings
      that's just a browser and file explorer bundled with DRM
      what other launcher gives the feature like steam input for free, without hassle and is compatible with nearly if not all controllers including controllers made for accessibility reason
      if the competitors want to compete with steam, they need to compete with their own launcher, storefront, and infrastructure
      forcing users to a worse experience only pads the number for a short time before users starts leaving
      GOG just works, but i can't call it a "direct" competitor because of the "no DRM". not saying DRM is good but the publishers are the one that chooses if they want DRM (and they do) it's not that "i" didnt pick GOG, the game just isn't on GOG therefore it is not option to enjoy the game through GOG

    • @deuswulf6193
      @deuswulf6193 4 месяца назад +2

      @@ceu160193 Price competition is the whole point of a healthy market. This not only applies to users, but also developers who are looking at the best deal for themselves as well.
      Most games on Steam don't even have a workshop (most users tend to use Nexus mods anyway), community can exist off site, and other services? I think that's largely just an excuse people claim to hide the fact they really just want to keep all their games on one platform, and have built up a cult of personality around Valve to internally justify it.
      If a developer wants to sell their game, something they worked hard to make, and they want to put it first on Epic for example, a lot of gamers will just attack the dev for doing so or outright black list them, which in turn prevents actual market competition.
      Valve, for what its worth, was able to jump start their "platform" in the early days by forcing it to install with physical copy games, including HL2 which alone got them over 60 million users at the start (btw we all hated it back then). It was effectively DRM forced on users. That alone blew up their user base, and gave them a big head start. That along with a long development time, got Steam to where it is today.
      There was no real competition outside of Steam's initial purpose of being a type of DRM. Being one of the first + forcing millions of users to sign up to the service, allowed them to cement their position early on. It's tough.

    • @deuswulf6193
      @deuswulf6193 4 месяца назад +1

      @@lifegrain6092 Worse experience? Are they though? It depends on the metric from which you measure "experience".
      Is the goal of a storefront to download and play a game? Is the goal of a game to play it? If yes, then all the platforms do this perfectly fine. In fact, one could argue Epic and GoG are better since their games, once installed, do not require the service to launch first.
      I could play a game downloaded from Steam or Epic, and completely close the launcher without effecting the game. However if I try to do that with steam, the game itself will also close. Based on that metric, Steam could be argued to be the worst.
      If the metric is "forum attachment" and discoverability, then Steam easily takes the cake.
      Honestly I think a lot of gamers have forgotten the point of gaming. It's about playing the games themselves, the storefront or launcher's don't matter. Back in the day we used developer or 3rd forums, or chat groups for our community if necessary. Even better, the community with online games was in the game itself.
      Today, people seem to care more about the storefront itself than the game, which is really odd to me.
      My steam account is near 20 years old at this point. Seen it since the beginning. The irony is that most of us at the time hated the platform, but we were forced to use it to play physical copy games. It was a similar situation to HellDivers 2's plan to require you to use a Sony account just to play the game after purchase.
      I have seen all the bad sides with Steam as well as the good. Valve started the lootbox monetization scheme, they tried to monetize mods (which could be done right), their service effectively killed physical copy PC games, sharing or trading games with friends...etc A lot of this stuff console players can still do.
      Mostly what we got for it at the end of the day is accessibility and cheaper pricing. Now neither of those is true with the competitors, only now that we are "invested" (by choice or by "force") into Steam, the incentive to use another platform is hampered greatly (outside of price).
      The solution to this monopoly market situation has always been to normalize the use game hubs which combine all the platforms into one. This would let the stores compete on pricing, both for devs and users, while the users have one hub for everything combined.
      The foundations for this already exist with apps like Playnite and GoG Galaxy's ability to add steam, epic, EA...etc accounts to the library. They even include some basic social aspects, which keep track of which friends are online and on which platform.

    • @ceu160193
      @ceu160193 4 месяца назад

      @@deuswulf6193 What are Nexus mods? When I first time had to use outside mod manager(for Lethal Company), it was very inconvenient.

  • @mr.vongrimmsy
    @mr.vongrimmsy 4 месяца назад +4

    Funny thing about Steam China - _almost no one here uses it,_ or at least I haven't really seen it in my 12+ years here... Steam ('Global', I guess you'd call it? The 'default' version anyway...) isn't blocked to begin with, so the former doesn't exactly fulfill its intended purpose it seems.
    I mean... I have plenty of games to boot, and none are censored. 🤷‍♂
    Certain games being geo-blocked is another matter though. I'm pretty sure anything from Konami has been blocked, and there's some others I've come across in the past, but I can't recall specific examples at the moment. It's certainly not a long list though, to be clear.

    • @p_1945
      @p_1945 3 месяца назад +2

      I think for china valve likely to know that many Chinese may use steam global from Hong Kong loophole anyway and that steam maybe sort of act of compliance to PRC government only.

    • @mr.vongrimmsy
      @mr.vongrimmsy 3 месяца назад +1

      @@p_1945 Ironically, it's easy enough to just download/install Steam global without any circumventive measures; you can even change your store region/language to Chinese without issue!
      But you're probably right regarding Steam China - it existing as a token act of compliance is one of the few purposes it could serve, seeing as _not a single one_ of the gamers I know here use it.
      Alternatively, it seems like it could be a good option for younger audiences, as many M-rated games aren't available on it, which isn't really a bad thing. 🤔

  • @fmo94jos8v3
    @fmo94jos8v3 4 месяца назад +1

    This is respectable. A developer heard the game they sold was being retired, and convinced them to give the game back so he could make it free to download/play. It would be nice if they did this more often, or at least allow those who purchased the game to continue to play it.