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The most promising Disco Elysium successor studio says workers must unite to topple Valve's 'digital fiefdom' of Steam

119 comments
  • Right on. I enjoy steam and I find Valve are mostly responsible gatekeepers, but at the end of the day, they’re still a gatekeeper

    • Are they gatekeepers though? It's not like they own Windows or Linux and stop you from using any other store. Just having the biggest audience doesn't make them gatekeepers to the market.

      I never see people talking about what valve should change other than lowering the 30% cut, but arbitrarily forcing that would set a bad precedent.

      Instead of virtue signalling here's reasonable things Valve could do:

      • allow developers to chose what features of steam they use for each game, allowing them to lower the cut by individually opting out of forums, workshop, cloud saves, achievements, inventory items etc
      • offer a purchase = one time download with no drm (still legally one copy) for the closest thing to "owning" a digital game
      • allow someone to inherit a steam account

      Someone correct me if I'm wrong but I'm pretty sure proton is free to use and you can install stores and games not from steam on a Steam Deck, so again I really don't know what they're gatekeeping.

    • But what's the alternative?

      • Gog, direct distribution, something else I haven’t thought of. I just fear monocultures. Things can go south fast

    • I find it really interesting how Valve hired Yanis Varoufakis to analyze the markets that were spontaneously emerging from games on their platform, and how he went on to write a book about the feudalistic nature of internet platforms that is being referred to here. I wonder what Gaben thinks of that and what Yanis thinks about Steam.

      Then there is the aspect of Valve being a flat company, no hierarchy, and how Gaben has talked about avoiding rent-seeking that other companies were taking part in, how he wants to make good products for gamers, doesn't look at sales numbers.

      Valve has some really great philosophy running behind it, and then there is the fiefdom of Steam extracting rents from publishers.

  • I agree and hope that what comes after it is even better at supporting gaming on GNU/Linux and contributing to various libre and opensource projects like KDE and Proton and Mesa and such.

119 comments