$843 million lawsuit against Valve already has its own website: "The Steam Claim" accuses the biggest store in PC gaming of "overcharging" players (www.gamesradar.com)
from Dadifer@lemmy.world to games@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 17:47
https://lemmy.world/post/16562914

#games

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tekeous@usenet.lol on 15 Jun 18:19 next collapse

Are you joking? I’ve saved thousands, maybe hundreds of thousands, by waiting for Steam Sales and buying games at a reasonable price for me(I’m poor) rather than paying $60 a game. Nobody else does this(When was the last time Nintendo put Mario Kart on sale?)

The statement “Steam overcharges gamers” is self-defeating and hilarious.

vaquedoso@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 18:34 next collapse

Totally agree, steam is one the big players that stills offers a quality service both for consumers and for developers

fartsparkles@sh.itjust.works on 15 Jun 18:41 next collapse

Right?! Having moved off of consoles entirely this generation, I’ve hoovered up amazing games during the countless Steam sales at prices CEX can’t even beat.

I hope this gets thrown out as hogwash.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 15 Jun 20:13 next collapse

They get a 30% cut and make enough money that Gaben is a billionaire so yeah, games prices could be much cheaper.

Zahille7@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 20:28 next collapse

I mean literally everything could be cheaper. Welcome to a capitalist society.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 15 Jun 20:31 collapse

Wow, you’re starting to get it, maybe we should start doing something about it instead of defending those who profit, right?

RandomException@sopuli.xyz on 15 Jun 20:43 next collapse

What would be the solution here that could drive the prices down? Limit profit levels per company?

I feel like it’s not even capitalism itself being the problem alone, but also the entry cost for all these services. Building a competitor to Steam is pretty much equal to building a competitor to Youtube which means it’s almost impossible due to the running costs of the service AND you would have to be somehow wildly better as in not gather as much money from your customers. It would be lovely to see some resolution to these problems without going full communism first.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 15 Jun 20:48 next collapse

Break it down, it clearly has too much power over the gaming sector. Impose a maximum share for distributors because clearly 30% is way more than they actually need.

RandomException@sopuli.xyz on 15 Jun 21:16 collapse

Okay, but who gets to decide what’s the maximum profit margin allowed? How would it be determined so that it wouldn’t also prevent new competition from growing up because that 30% is the only thing that allows the companies to make some money from their service and use that money to develop said service.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 15 Jun 23:08 collapse

Base it on market share and revenues.

Carighan@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 06:36 collapse

Nothing really. Publishers already all want to go up to 70 base price, and most bigger games already effectively cost 100-200 between pre-orders, deluxe editions and mtx (I don’t know the designed price point, but years ago I was talking to the team of an in-dev game who planned for 110 being spent on average per buyer for their game).

Katana314@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 21:03 next collapse

If there was no method by which people could ever profit from a system like Steam, why bother building it?

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 15 Jun 21:08 collapse

There’s a difference between making profit and becoming one of the richest person in the world, in the second case it means you clearly made too much profit by selling for a higher price than required.

RandomException@sopuli.xyz on 15 Jun 21:36 collapse

Let’s play ball here too. So by definition there’s always going to be a richest person in the world - let it be with a difference of 100 dollars to the median or a billion dollars or 100 billion dollars. Who gets to decide who is the richest person and by what means? Clearly it shouldn’t be a business person so would it be a politician, a dictator, a president or who? And how should we restrict entrepreneurs getting there without destroying every company and therefore making everyone unemployed because there’s no incentive to run a business anymore? How would we balance risks with gains if we are not allowed to make a profit?

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 15 Jun 23:04 next collapse

A richest person will always exist, there’s no reason why that richest person couldn’t have 500k in their bank account while the median is at 250k though.

TheGalacticVoid@lemm.ee on 15 Jun 23:45 next collapse

1.5 million is not a lot of money when you’re talking about the richest person.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 00:20 collapse

The 1 was a typo and in a perfect world where wealth is distributed equally, 500k would be a whole lot.

Heck, even today in rich countries, 500k in savings is an anomaly. 78% of US citizens live paycheck to paycheck, having 10k in saving is something they can’t fathom, 500k is a whole fucking lot.

ashok36@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 12:41 collapse

The fact you’re setting an arbitrary limit of cash in a bank account shows how little you’ve thought about this. Rich people have money in the bank, sure, but the vast amount of their wealth is in stocks, property, and other assets. Also, assuming rich people have one bank account they keep all their money in is foolish. You have to spread your cash around to multiple accounts and even banks in order to not exceed the amount the government is willing to insure.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 21:01 collapse

I dumbed it down to the level of the people who are defending billionaires. No one should be allowed to have multiple millions or billions in wealth while people are starving even in rich countries.

ashok36@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 22:35 collapse

Ah yes, the old “I was only pretending to be dumb” excuse.

Donkter@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 01:24 collapse

You’re definitely right that you picked apart their argument because ackshually there will always be a richest person. But clearly the sentiment is that someone shouldn’t get excessive wealth past their threshold.

How do we define excessive wealth and how do we limit it? Well there are lots and lots of proposals I would suggest reading up on some (you can Google that question to get 10 op eds that suggest 20 different solutions). I wouldn’t mind defining it as a certain percentage higher than the median wealth of the country. It would be funny to give Gabe Newell a “you won capitalism” trophy and taking excess wealth he gains.

As for motivation. It’s a much murkier subject than you imply. In an economy where the state takes every penny of a successful business’s wealth, yeah it makes sense that there’s no motivation to make a successful business. But if one could still get rich off of running a business (just not god-tier level wealth) I’m sure there would be plenty of motivation. And hell, if we give them prestige like we do now there’s tons of people who do what they do just for the fame with no profit. There’s tons of evidence that people aren’t purely motivated by the infinite profit of business people all over the world work their asses off in jobs they enjoy or respect that will never pay them Gabe Newell bucks.

acosmichippo@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 22:18 collapse

the solution to that is taxes, not suing successful business one at a time.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 15 Jun 23:02 collapse

Or breaking them or nationalization so profit goes to everyone instead of a single guy.

TheGalacticVoid@lemm.ee on 15 Jun 23:43 next collapse

And you want to start with Valve, which is one of the smaller game companies and is one of the few players not guilty of buying up their competition, instead of Sony, Microsoft, other Big Tech players, media conglomerates like Disney, ISPs like Comcast or AT&T, or meat distributors who are price fixing algorithmicly?

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 00:20 collapse

Who said I want to start with them?

stardust@lemmy.ca on 15 Jun 23:57 next collapse

Why even buy games period? Why risk giving money to any of them since things that become popular risk making the people selling them to become wealthy? Not like indies are immune to it looking at Minecraft becoming too popular that too many people wanted to buy it making one person then a corporation wealthy, so why not just not buy period to prevent the issue from even becoming a possibility?

The best solution is prevention. Don’t buy anything.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 00:22 collapse

Who said I do?

stardust@lemmy.ca on 16 Jun 01:40 collapse

You don’t buy games?

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 02:49 collapse

Not on Steam and not in ways that enrich billionaires. If devs don’t make their game available another way then too bad, they chose to deal with the devil, I don’t have to encourage them, won’t keep me from playing their games through other means or by getting them through giveaways.

stardust@lemmy.ca on 16 Jun 02:57 collapse

So which non billionaire associated company or publisher.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 10:37 collapse

Ever heard of… Indie Games? Itch.io?

LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 16 Jun 00:22 collapse

Average sh.itjust.works IQ be like

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 00:27 next collapse

Pretty freaking high to realize that you must be an idiot to defend the people who are the opposite end of the food chain.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 00:29 next collapse

Oh will you look at that, an hypocrite

lemmy.dbzer0.com/comment/11183086

LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 17 Jun 04:27 collapse

Yeah bud Steam having decent game sales is literally like a corrupt government contract boss gets a pay rise at a corpo dumping sewage into rivers and polluting drinking water and making people sick.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 17 Jun 09:13 collapse

Stop defending a billionaire and his company, you’ll never be one of them, all billionaires need to go, none of them became one by being moral, if it was any other company you would be talking about guillotines.

nore@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 01:45 collapse

bruh, don’t lump me with this idiot.

RandomException@sopuli.xyz on 15 Jun 20:33 next collapse

They absolutely could. If only there was any serious competition and not just some quick cash grabbers like EA and others. As long as Steam is providing most value to users (=players) without even restricting competition like other tech companies do in other areas (cough Apple), they are able to take the 30% cut without a complaint.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 15 Jun 20:34 next collapse

“without a complaint”

Eh… You realize what this discussion is based on?

RandomException@sopuli.xyz on 15 Jun 20:36 collapse

I do, and I feel like the real intent is something completely different here than what is said out loud.

E: So Epic Games Store is actually giving out games for free and they still can’t gain traction because their platform sucks so bad otherwise. My guess is someone just wants to try and get a tough competitor driven out of one country so that they could bring their own, worse, service there instead and take the market share without actually competing.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 15 Jun 20:44 collapse

Epic isn’t involved in that lawsuit so I don’t know why you’re them into the conversation.

If a company charges X$ for a product and the CEO ends up being able to own six yacht I fucking hope someone will wake up and say “Hold on buddy, you’re clearly ripping people off.”

What’s crazy is that if the lawsuit was against Apple or a grocery chain you guys would all be cheering, but you made yourselves believe that Steam was a good guy when all they do is make sure they get more money from more people, they don’t do shit for free.

RandomException@sopuli.xyz on 15 Jun 21:00 collapse

I brought Epic just as an example of an actual competitor actually trying to compete against Steam, sorry if I I was a bit unclear about that.

So lots of entrepreneurs get rich when they make a product that solves people’s problems in one way or another and it sells with a profit - let it be a small profit or a large profit. The thing with capitalism is, if you make your profit too large, eventually a competitor will come and provide an equal or better product with slightly smaller profit or they figured out a way to make the product cheaper and still maintain the same profit margin with a lower price gaining a market share.

The problem with Apple, other large tech companies or some grocery chains in some parts of world (this is the case where I live actually) is that they are not allowing a healthy competition in the first place. If a competitor appears on the market, they will buy them before gaining too much traction, or if that’s not possible, they will do everything they can in their power to drive them out of the market by lobbying politicians, or if they control some valuable aspect of the market, restrict access to said market.

Valve hasn’t practiced any of those shady tactics as far as I know of and that’s why people actually think of them as one of the “good guys” even if it is somewhat unhealthy. You shouldn’t try to beat down the people playing with a friendly rule set of capitalism because they are the ones driving the competition forward.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 15 Jun 21:07 collapse

Valve has enough of the market that they don’t need to do that because they’re the default option, just like Microsoft doesn’t need to fear macOS or Linux or anyone that would try to jump in the game and create a new OS (hell, they even had up finance Apple in order to create competition). They don’t practice these shady tactics (although that’s disputable and they’re getting sued for it) because they don’t have to to win, they can just wait it out and let potential competitors ruin themselves. Even if someone came and offered everything Steam offers and more, people wouldn’t switch because their games are already on Steam. Just like people who are used to Windows and have bought programs compatible with it won’t abandon everything and start over with another OS.

RandomException@sopuli.xyz on 15 Jun 21:25 collapse

So “too big to fail” or something?

I don’t know if you lived through the Internet Explorer era, but that was exactly the same situation in browsers back in the day. Internet Explorer was preinstalled in every Windows computer, so in pretty much every computer, and it was deemed as “unbeatable” because people were too lazy to install anything else. In retrospective, it didn’t take too long for Google Chrome to beat IE market share and nowadays pretty much the whole world uses Chrome and nothing else. Now, with IE, EU had to step in and force Microsoft to present their users a dialog to choose their browser in a fresh Windows installation which did have a role in that market share change. With Steam there isn’t a need for that, because every user has to go and explicitly install Steam client to their computer before using it. Same goes with Chrome.

Although, vendor lock really is a real issue, and I do agree with you that if one has thousands of euros/dollars worth of games in their Steam account, it’s purely convenient to keep on buying their next games on Steam as well. What I don’t agree with is, that if there was a new competitor that was better in every way imaginable and they were able to sell the games on their platform for, let’s say, -5% constantly, people wouldn’t start using their service. You have to remember, that there is also a constant stream of new gamers (young people) that haven’t even created a Steam account, and nothing is preventing them from choosing another service for their first game purchase. It’s just that there isn’t a real alternative to Steam currently.

Zahille7@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 02:15 next collapse

An alternative that allows you to add friends, instant message them in-game whenever, that also hosts social hubs for each of its thousands of games; where people can post guides, fanart, videos, and discussions?

SaltySalamander@fedia.io on 16 Jun 11:57 collapse

I don't know if you lived through the Internet Explorer era

You know this person didn't live through that era. They're waaaay too young for that.

Katana314@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 21:05 collapse

The only reason EA and others aren’t serious competition is because of their lack of effort.

Every time the topic comes up, PC gamers don’t bother with their services because they’re shoddily written and slow. The complaint of “They don’t have millions of games on there to amass in one library” is a minority one.

RandomException@sopuli.xyz on 15 Jun 21:13 next collapse

Exactly. Why should they succeed if they don’t even try to win the competition?

Streaming platforms for TV series and movies went into the direction of every large movie company running their own streaming platform and only limiting their own content to their own platform which lead into a bad customer experience when you just wanted to see the latest Disney or HBO or whatever thing. I think it’s a good thing EA and others didn’t succeed doing the same in gaming industry and only limiting their games to their own stores even though they did try really hard. That’s not even competition, it’s just being greedy.

A true competitor to Steam would try to sell and serve games of their own and also made by others. I guess Epic tries to do that in a sense but they also lack the actual effort of making a good product and instead tries to win some market share by just throwing lots of money at it. I know it’s hard to build an actually good software product (because I work in the industry) but I also know it’s not impossible. Somehow the companies that have the means to compete just aren’t able to get their shit together and for some reason that’s the reason why we shouldn’t like Valve either?

Carighan@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 06:38 collapse

I mean, if Epic actually did what shills like @Kecessa@sh.itjust.works promote - that is, reflect lower cuts in a cheaper price to consumers, then we would all be flabbergasted how big their market percentage is.

But they’re not doing that, that’s the thing. Because Tim Sweeney does not want storefronts to take a smaller cut. Quite the opposite. His problem is that the cut is only 30%, and worse, does not go into his pockets!

crossmr@kbin.run on 16 Jun 14:46 collapse

But there is always an excuse. Epic tried that. Companies complained.

Their sales used to give you a reusable $10 off coupon. That didn't change the amount the companies got when someone bought their game. It only changed how much they paid. When one of the Witcher games had that coupon applied to it, the developer got pissed off and changed the price of the game so that it was a cent or two below the threshold to activate the coupon, and then fans of the dev were excusing it claiming that they couldn't let the price be lower because it would 'devalue' the game.

if a game was $30 on Steam and $25 on Epic (as a regular price), or some other service, you'd undoubtedly hear the same rhetoric.

Epic's cut is 12% not 30%. They also waive the 5% royalty fee over $1 million for sales on the Epic Store if you use Unreal. Epic doesn't control the prices. Devs set the prices. They leave the price the same on Epic so that they can actually get a little more for each sale.

What the should do on a $60 game though is to set the price at like $56 on Epic, it would encourage people to save a couple bucks there, while still getting them more than steam after the cuts.

BigPotato@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 05:11 next collapse

In a world where Sony and Embracer are running around saying we need to be paying $70+ for games (while tipping the devs and buying micro transactions like a good like wallet)… You’re mad at the storefront?

Yeah, go into Walmart and demand they take less of a cut so… The publisher can take more from the devs?

Gabe is rich because he spearheaded a good service (which I’ll admit I thought was a scam back when I was forced to make an account way back when I had dial up) but… 30% is standard. For the price of games? Be mad at Embracer. Be mad at EA. You’re free to not like or use Steam but they let the publishers set the price. Their cut is a drop in the bucket. The whole ‘cut’ debate is just EGS propaganda.

mjhelto@lemm.ee on 16 Jun 08:46 next collapse

…(which I’ll admit I thought was a scam back when I was forced to make an account way back when I had dial up)…

Oh man, I cursed Valve and Steam back then. It effectively made LAN parties of the time impossible since you could no longer share media and needed Internet access to play. Back then, only business had the “fast” Internets while everyone else had 56k baud modems. Hard to do much when your max download speed for the entire connection was 5kb/s.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 10:39 collapse

saying we need to be paying $70+ for games

On which Steam gets $21 or more so in reality they need to sell games for $50.

Carighan@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 06:34 next collapse

As evidenced by games costing less on stores where the cut is lower!

Oh… wait…

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 10:41 next collapse

Why would they lower their price if the same game needs to be sold for more on another platform in order to see a RoI?

Carighan@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 13:06 collapse

But it doesn’t need to be sold for more? As evidenced by not being sold for more despite the cut Valve takes? If that were an issue the games would cost say 70 on Steam but 60 elsewhere?

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 21:00 collapse

It needs to be sold for 70 on Steam in order to bring in the revenue per copy they need for their RoI, why would they go and sell for less elsewhere if Steam with their 30% share sets the bar? People won’t feel ripped off, the price is the same, what they don’t realize is that the only reason the price is that high in the first place is that Valve gets 21$ from each sale! The company needs 49$/copy in their pockets, if the distributor’s share had always been 15% instead of 30% we would be buying games for 58$ instead of 70$ right now.

MufinMcFlufin@lemmy.world on 17 Jun 06:19 collapse

I find it absolutely wild that you seem to think Steam’s 30% cut is the sole reason AAA games cost $70. Have you ever looked into how much it costs to sell a game at a retail store? From what I’ve seen Steam takes roughly the same cut as most retailers do and then the publisher still has to produce the physical copies and distribute them. They would make the same amount on Steam if and only if they printed, burned, packaged, and distributed their physical copies for free, not to mention the promotional materials they’re sending out to retailers.

Everything I’m seeing indicates that compared to a physical copy (which is given for a majority of AAA games) a major publisher would earn far more money per copy on Steam than at GameStop, Target, Walmart, or any other retailer where they’re charging the same $70 price at. But Steam is the real problem that’s hurting their RoI, apparently.

I’ll agree I think Steam’s cut is high and they could earn a lot of favor by turning it down a bit, but your argument seeming to insinuate that their 30% cut is the sole reason games cost $70 is absolutely wild to me.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 17 Jun 09:12 collapse

This discussion is about Steam, they have control over the market, all distributors are in the wrong and take too high of a cut, I’ll talk about the other distributors when we have a discussion about them.

MufinMcFlufin@lemmy.world on 17 Jun 11:23 collapse

So companies made due with the same cut from retailers for decades, Steam comes along and offers the same cut with none of the other expenses associated with those retailers (thereby giving them a better RoI than the same retailers they made due with for decades) and suddenly Steam is the reason games are so expensive.

For all of your talk that Steam’s awful cut sets the bar for the price or else they won’t make their RoI on games sold there, you suddenly don’t seem to care very much about the very many retailers these AAA publishers still regularly sell through that cost them a significantly larger percentage per game sold than Steam does.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 17 Jun 13:26 collapse

Oh, is it other retailers the article is talking about? No, it’s not.

MufinMcFlufin@lemmy.world on 17 Jun 14:22 collapse

Oh is that because Steam exists in isolation and can’t be compared to any other platform? If so, tell me what about Steam makes it an apples to oranges comparison with Epic, GOG, Origin, and Battle.Net? If they’re up for discussion then why is it that physical game distribution isn’t allowed to be talked about? If an average consumer is only really concerned about getting the game then why are some forms of getting their game not allowed for discussion? Why should retailers be exempt from this discussion?

You also didn’t seem to mind slashing their cut percentage in half, but how can we know that’s a feasible percentage if we’re not allowed to talk about other distributors and see if they’re able to make 15% work? If we’re not considering other distributors at all then who’s to say if 30% is unreasonable? Should it be increased or decreased and by how much?

Suppose we were instead talking about Nintendo selling games for too much, how would we decide it’s too much if we couldn’t compare it to other studios, distributors, or platforms that demonstrate they can still run a business and charge less?

Face it, talk about and comparison to any other distributor or distribution method is fully relevant and required if you want to have any meaningful discussion. You just don’t seem to want to discuss retailers because they’re hurting your weak argument.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 17 Jun 14:59 collapse

I’m against all retailers taking a 30% cut and therefore leading us to overpay, this discussion was about Steam.

Are you guys unable to compute that just because someone is talking about company X, it doesn’t mean they it’s the only company they are angry with?

MufinMcFlufin@lemmy.world on 17 Jun 20:44 collapse

It sounds to me like you’ve already started with the conclusion that 30% is too much considering you’re against all retailers taking 30%, seemingly without any regards to the context any of these retailers might have. How is it that you’ve determined that 30% is too much, and don’t forget that you’re the one who argued that other distributors are not relevant in this discussion.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 17 Jun 21:17 collapse

Is the company generating enough profit that its owner is at least a multimillionaire while people (especially in their own country) can barely afford to pay for basic needs?

No > Not a problem

Yes > There’s a major fucking problem, they’re overcharging their customers and something must be broken in your brain for you to defend them instead of your own interests

That applies to every single company in existence.

MufinMcFlufin@lemmy.world on 17 Jun 22:26 next collapse

Great, you have a simple rule that’s wholely unrealistic and as poorly construed as pretty much everything else you’ve been saying so far. Such a rule could so easily be worked around that it may as well already exist for all that it would matter.

I’ll again reiterate that I agree with what you want to argue. I agree that I think Steam could probably take a smaller cut, still be profitable enough to stay in business at the same scale they are, afford more smaller businesses a better cut of the money they’re generating for themselves and for steam, and give the option to charge less to consumers. I agree that there are too many mega corporations, making way too much money, screwing too many of their clients, customers, and employees. I agree that too many executives are making genuinely fuck loads of money that are inhumanly excessive.

I’ll still say again though, that pretty much everything you’ve argued so far is wildly unrealistic, unfounded in reality, barely thought through at all, and comes across as the absurd ramblings of a middle schooler who passed an economics elective.

I’ll also point out the hypocrisy of you attacking Steam (and to your credit other distributors retail or otherwise) but defending the publishers that by your arguments simply must charge more or else they don’t make money back on their investment. Your argument defends AAA publishers such as EA churning out games year after year with the exact same code just different stats for sports games (FIFA, NBA, whatever the current football games are), games exploiting gambling addictions (pay to win, FOMO, loot boxes), and games exploiting the efforts and attention of children (Roblox).

Also “something must be broken in your brain for you to defend them instead of your own interests” is rich coming from the person who’s very visibly experiencing double-think seemingly genuinely arguing “of course publishers aren’t going to charge less for their titles on other digital marketplaces because if they need a $49 RoI on Steam then they’re going to charge the same $70 price on other platforms” at the same time as “well if Steam didn’t charge a 30% cut then you would pay $50 for an otherwise $70 title!” as if you don’t believe in your own argument that they would charge the same exact price on Steam as they do elsewhere.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 18 Jun 01:41 collapse

wildly unrealistic, unfounded in reality

Under capitalism it is.

Carighan@lemmy.world on 19 Jun 10:57 collapse

Question: Does that not mean that Epic is a company that has no standing to complain against Valve, considering they’re in the same boat? As in, the decision should if anything be to force both companies to lower their consumer prices from 60 to 40-50, paying the difference out of their own pockets?

Because if not, this naturally creates the exact same issue, just on the other side of the pond. And we’d be back here in half a year with another set of lawyers.

Baseline law change: Cannot charge more than 10% fee on digital storefronts no matter what, price to consumer cannot go above, say, €45.

That’d solve it, no?

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 19 Jun 11:42 collapse

This discussion was about Valve but all big companies are in the wrong here. The accumulation of wealth is always done at the expense of the less wealthy.

smeg@feddit.uk on 19 Jun 10:37 collapse

That is addressed by the lawyer:

According to Shotbolt, the developer and digital distribution company is “shutting out” all competition in the PC gaming market as it “forces” game publishers to sign off on price parity obligations - supposedly preventing them from going on to offer lower prices on other platforms.

Carighan@lemmy.world on 19 Jun 10:58 collapse

But I thought those are only for steam keys? That’s always been what devs found out when trying to vary their prices on storefronts: Sell the game standalone, Valve sleeps. Sell a steam key or use the steam backend, real shit.

Epic is good at making it sound like it applies to sales in general though, while technically not being wrong from how they word it: You do sign a price parity obligation, yes. And it does prevent you from offering lower prices on other stores. For, well, steam keys. But they’re not mentioning that last part as that makes it sound like Epic just sells stuff for the same end-user price because they can.

smeg@feddit.uk on 19 Jun 11:11 collapse

I’ve seen some comments agreeing with you and others citing examples of individual developers being told not to sell at lower prices. Don’t know if the prosecutor is citing those cases or they’re just a chancer who hasn’t done their research properly.

Carighan@lemmy.world on 19 Jun 11:30 collapse

They’re also the prosecutor, they can word it like that if they so desire. It’s on the opposing attorney to correct them.

And possibly demand sanctions if they can convince the bar that it was willful omission of details.

ElectroLisa@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 16 Jun 08:22 collapse

Epic with a lower cut has the same game prices. Additionally Valve lowered their cut ahead of a launch of Epic Games Store

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 10:51 next collapse

geekwire.com/…/valves-new-steam-revenue-sharing-t…

By default, as per the old rules, Steam takes 30 percent off the top of any revenue that a given title generates on the storefront. In the new system, once a game earns $10 million in sales, Steam will adjust its share to 25 percent. If a game proceeds to hit the $50 million mark, Steam’s share further declines to 20 percent. The total revenue includes any and all income sources for a given game, such as package deals, add-on packs, in-game transactions, and fees applied to trading on the Steam Community Marketplace.

According to Steam’s post on the subject, “Our hope is this change will reward the positive network effects generated by developers of big games, further aligning their interests with Steam and the community.”

In other words, this is meant to encourage big developers not to take their games elsewhere by rewarding them with a bigger slice of the income. $10 million may sound high, but at a $60 price point, that’s around 167,000 sales. As a glance at SteamSpy can tell you, that’s nothing special for a mainstream PC game. Conversely, even a successful indie game may not reach $10 million in revenue over the course of its entire operational lifetime. In practice, the terms of the new revenue system appear to mean that a big “triple-A” mainstream title is being rewarded with a more favorable income split by Steam simply for showing up on the market at all.

BuT vAlVe DoEsN’t UsE aNtI cOmPeTiTiVe TaCtIcS!

p03locke@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 16 Jun 14:33 collapse

This is just a description of a standard business model. Most percentage-based revenue or sales systems have lower prices for higher quantities.

It’s called the “bulk discount” for a reason.

crossmr@kbin.run on 16 Jun 14:49 collapse

They lowered the cut for people who didn't need it. Massive publishers selling tons of games. Arguably indie games that only sell a few copies need a larger cut than EA on their latest blockbuster.

There isn't much in the way of scale here. Their bandwidth isn't monitored on a per game basis, and if that was a factor in the cost they'd be basing the cut on the size of your game. Some 1 gb indie game pays the same cut or larger than a 100gb mammoth from EA. Valve is also way more strict with that indie game in getting itself published than they are with the EA game as well.

fluxion@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 21:32 next collapse

You’re poor but have possibly spent hundreds of thousands on games?

acosmichippo@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 22:19 next collapse

yen

tekeous@usenet.lol on 16 Jun 01:39 collapse

No, I’ve saved hundreds of thousands. Between Steam sales and Humble Bundle, always being a patient gamer, I’ve amassed over 300 games id like to play but haven’t spent more than $500 on Steam over my entire life. I’m poor but $500 over a couple years I can do.

For comparison, at $60 a game, that would buy me 8 console or Nintendo games at full price plus a little DLC.

It’s the best price, bar none.

fluxion@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 03:17 next collapse

My mistake, I thought you’d literally saved thousands from sales pricing

BigPotato@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 04:46 collapse

Different guy but I’ve got over 2,700 games on Steam thanks to sales… So I’ve probably saved at least one thousand… Maybe not two, unless we count not buying for Star Citizen as a savings!

fluxion@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 05:22 collapse

Which is totally reasonable, but 100x that raises an eyebrow

SaltySalamander@fedia.io on 16 Jun 12:03 next collapse

You've saved hundreds or thousands, but you've not saved hundreds of thousands.

Stovetop@lemmy.world on 17 Jun 00:48 collapse

Is that in American dollars?

If those 300 games were even US $70 each which is exceedingly generous, you’d only scratch $21,000 as the cost of everything. Unless Steam was literally giving you $180,000+ for using their store, you’ve not saved hundreds of thousands.

Unless you’re referring to hundreds of thousands of pennies.

MufinMcFlufin@lemmy.world on 17 Jun 05:42 collapse

It’s possible they have more games in their library as they did say 300+ games they want to play, but yeah the numbers they gave don’t add up to hundreds of thousands. Unless they were taking phrases like “a $700 Demon Souls machine” very literally.

LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 16 Jun 00:21 next collapse

Maybe this lawsuit is founded by this dodgy lawyer group on behalf of a competitor under the table, who is pissed at exactly the fact steam sales are too generous and others cannot compete

Carighan@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 06:34 collapse

Would said competitor be the one who successfully trained their users to only look at their store once a week for a free game or two then close the store again? 😉

Omegamanthethird@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 00:38 next collapse

Playstation and Xbox regularly put games on sale. And their base prices almost always go down over time. I assume Steam is more steep discounts. But you can absolutely get by without paying full price on consoles if you wait.

Trainguyrom@reddthat.com on 16 Jun 01:30 next collapse

You can usually snag items for 75% or more off about 1-2 years after launch on Steam (and by extension all other PC game sales platforms) and it’s consistent enough that you can count on it (and I do!). I’ve never seen discounts go that deep on consoles, at least not for games I actually play.

vaultdweller013@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 13:45 collapse

Also GOG will just decide at random that a game is infact 1 dollar for no reason.

Jakeroxs@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 07:58 collapse

Nintendo doesn’t tho

Trainguyrom@reddthat.com on 16 Jun 01:28 next collapse

I recently got my first current-gen game console a couple of years ago (Nintendo switch) and was floored at how expensive all of the games are and how meager the sales are. PC gaming is shockingly cheap when you get down to it

Brunbrun6766@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 04:28 next collapse

FYI go walk your local target from time to time. They’ll sometimes have random sales on the big switch games with no online listing of the sale. I got the last pokemon game 6 months or so late for $20 off

stardust@lemmy.ca on 16 Jun 05:47 next collapse

Nintendo doesn’t reward super patient gaming though like other consoles where I didnt pay more than over $20 for any PS4 first party exclusives. It is actually on the weird side where sometimes physical prices actually go up with Nintendo seeming to be more conservative about number of physical copies they make to keep prices high compared to Sony where brick and motor stores look to offload physical inventory. So leads to used market for Nintendo games going crazy compared to downward trend of other consoles.

Trainguyrom@reddthat.com on 16 Jun 15:40 collapse

Oh that’s good to know! Too bad my nearest target is 20 miles away and a very annoying drive over a poorly designed arterial road

prole@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 11:32 next collapse

Sales of physical copies of games is where consoles truly shine. It’s not as great as a few years ago (getting surplus steelbook games for like $10 sometimes), but you can still regularly pick up AAA games that are a handful of months old for $20 or sometimes less.

Check sites like dekudeals and psprices (steamDB is great too for making sure you’re not being over charged on Steam).

It’s just being a savvy consumer.

But yeah, when it comes to Nintendo hardware, the only reason to have it imo is the first party games, and those will never go on sale so you might as well just pony up. You can do the voucher thing and save $10 on each if you get two games (dunno if that’s still a thing).

SeekPie@lemm.ee on 17 Jun 11:52 collapse

I remember a couple of years ago when my little brother saved up for a switch for like a year, and then didn’t have any money left for games because of the prices.

Tyfud@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 15:55 collapse

Epic also does this

Coelacanth@feddit.nu on 15 Jun 18:23 next collapse

Can we not go after one of the few good guys in gaming? Please? If you want to hound someone Nintendo is right over there.

MossyFeathers@pawb.social on 15 Jun 19:11 next collapse

No. It’s easier to go after the “good guys” than the bad guys because they’re easier to beat. They won’t use all kinds of slimy, underhanded tactics to fuck you over.

Edit: I don’t approve of the lawsuit against valve, but that’s the way of the world. Scummy companies and people have many tools they can use to drag you down to their level.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 15 Jun 20:15 next collapse

Oh fuck off with the good guy thing, it’s a private company trying to make money, there’s no good people when profit is the goal, there’s no good billionaires and Gaben is one.

RandomException@sopuli.xyz on 15 Jun 20:34 next collapse

Let’s replace “good guy” with “one of the few actually good services in gaming”, would you still disagree?

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 15 Jun 20:40 collapse

No, they’re still overcharging us if they make enough profit that the boss could become a billionaire while the employees make more than the industry average.

I don’t know what goes though people’s mind to get them to defend for profit private companies, they’re not there to be your friend, they’re there to get you to take the money you earned and spend it while gaslighting you into believing that you get your money’s worth.

RandomException@sopuli.xyz on 15 Jun 20:49 collapse

I mean I get what you’re saying, but Valve is actually one of the few large tech companies that are providing an actually good service (Steam). People should be allowed to make money by providing value to their customers because that’s the motivation of building such services and products in the first place.

The hatred should go towards the companies abusing their position and violating customers and then just cashing excessive amounts of money for a crap product/service that has no real competition. If Valve had started making their competitors lives harder, by generating lots of nonsense lawsuits for example, they should absolutely be blasted down to hell by everybody. As long as they are just earning lots of bucks by providing a service people want to use without restricting using other services and playing with healthy rules otherwise as well, it’s all fine and everyone working on the great service SHOULD earn more than average.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 15 Jun 20:58 collapse

Why do you think they’re able to make that much money? Not by using their position as the store where the majority of people buys games from?

There’s no good guys when profits are the goal. They might provide good service, the only reason they’re doing so is because they see potential profit.

There’s a major difference between making more than average and being a billionaire. You know what’s the difference between making 500k a year and making a billion a year? About a billion.

RandomException@sopuli.xyz on 15 Jun 21:05 next collapse

I mean Valve has a game store called Steam, but what’s the actual position they have? There are competing game stores - both digital and physical - and Valve isn’t trying to run their competition out of business with shady business tactics? Just by being good at something and therefore running a successful business shouldn’t be illegal or hated by itself - it’s the way the business is being conducted that actually matters. Gaben is free to have yacht or two as long as his company is being run with a healthy mindset, their employees are being paid a fair salary (which I guess is another discussion in it’s own who decides that) and they are not screwing their competition nor their customers up.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 15 Jun 21:10 collapse

Six yachts.

They don’t need to actively run out their competition because they already have enough of the market that they’re the default option. Just like Microsoft doesn’t need to try and actively stop MacOS or Linux from existing.

RandomException@sopuli.xyz on 15 Jun 21:28 collapse

I don’t care how many yachts Gaben owns, he’s free to do whatever he wishes as long as he provides me a great service that I’m willing to use money towards.

And Microsoft did try really hard back in the day to make Linux go away. Luckily OSS community was already large enough that they were able to fight the legal cases and the whole thing didn’t dry up. Nowadays Microsoft endorses Linux because they decided they can squeeze value out of other people’s free work for themselves (and because pretty much the entire server industry runs on Linux anyways).

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 15 Jun 23:05 collapse

Billionaire exist at the expense of people like you and me buddy.

Nilz@sopuli.xyz on 15 Jun 21:14 next collapse

Steam didn’t get to where it is because of market abuse but because of providing a good service, or at least a service that was better than anything else at the time by far. Valve are reaping the rewards now, but are also still providing an arguably better service than it’s competitors. It’s a bit odd that you want to punish a company just for being successful.

Valve isn’t perfect and they’re profit driven, but they’re privately owned and the goals isn’t maximizing profit, which isn’t something you can say about most of their competitors.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 15 Jun 23:09 collapse

I’m all in for punishing all billionaires and you’re very naive if you think their goal isn’t too maximize profit. If it wasn’t there’s no reason why they would accumulate enough surplus for Gaben to own six yacht, they would instead reduce their 30% cut and pass the savings to everyone and we would have cheaper games.

Nilz@sopuli.xyz on 15 Jun 23:26 collapse

Yes, the profit is excessive, but it’s because they have a good product where the competition has not really been putting in much effort and letting Valve get away with it for so long.

Valve’s goal isn’t to maximize profit because they don’t have shareholders that demand it. If they really wanted to maximize profits then there’s a whole lot more to squeeze out of Steam and the games they made. And yes I agree Valve can lower their cut and still make bucket loads of money, but I highly doubt that if they did reduce their cut it would actually lead to cheaper games except for a maybe a few. Because just like Valve, the devs and publishers are profit driven and why would they turn down a potentially bigger profit?

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 00:21 collapse

Yes, the profit is excessive

You could have ended your message right there instead of getting on your knees and opening your mouth.

Saik0Shinigami@lemmy.saik0.com on 16 Jun 15:16 collapse

That’s all you’re able to read? 1/4 of a sentence?

Impressive.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 20:53 collapse

It was the only intelligent part

stardust@lemmy.ca on 15 Jun 21:36 collapse

I guess steam could have avoided making billions if they had never improved their launcher since Half Life 2. Not improving products and keeping it as crappy as possible so people stay away from it is one business strategy of ensuring people are deterred from using it.

Shame they kept improving and made something people want to use.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 15 Jun 23:04 collapse

Or they could have charged a fair share instead of 30%.

stardust@lemmy.ca on 15 Jun 23:08 collapse

Running a crappy service nobody wants to use is more effective. Even better if it is so bad the company goes bankrupt. That’s how to successfully avoid money.

LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 16 Jun 00:27 next collapse

Okay, but is Gaben more deserving of this than white replacement supporter, anti-trans fearmonger and apartheid diamond mine baby Musk? Than makes people piss in bottles in warehouses Bezos?

Is what steam does more predatory than basically every major music publisher (the big three), than MPAA? Than OpenAI? Than Meta? Than the streaming services? Than Nintendo? Than Apple? Than Google? Uber?.. And so on and so on.

So why pick on Valve? I’d go after fucking taco bell before Valve. Make it make sense.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 00:29 collapse

You assume that I’m not pissed at all these corporations and all billionaires and multimillionaires??

This discussion is about Valve, I’ll talk about the others when we have a discussion about them.

uranibaba@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 01:23 collapse

Isn’t that the discussion though? Take the time and money spent on this to fight someone more deserving.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 02:48 collapse

We can walk and chew bubblegum at the same time buddy.

Regrettable_incident@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 06:35 next collapse

Shame you’re getting so downvoted. People are so determined to believe in good philanthropic billionaires that they forget the system that allows the accumulation of such ridiculous wealth doesn’t work for nice philanthropic people. It was like this with Elon musk, before he sacked his publicists (my guess) before the cave diver thing. People were saying he was going so save humanity or some shit. All he’s done is fuck up twitter. Same with this guy. I use steam and I think my steam deck is a cool little machine but that doesn’t inspire me to tongue the sweaty arsehole of an obscenely rich guy.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 10:42 collapse

At least there’s a few people that get it

Carighan@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 07:53 next collapse

Even if you believe that all privately owned capital is intrinsicly evil, you still ought to go after companies from most to least problematic within a specific category, no?

That is, for digital storefronts, start with the likes of Epic or in a broader digital gaming space in general, Microsoft or Ubisoft. Go after Steam when you’ve cleaned up the rapists, backroom dealers and collusionists.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 10:45 collapse

You think humanity is unable to take care of two things at once?

You think Epic is worse when Valve has 70% of the market so they’re in a position to ruin everything in a second? You realize that the PC gaming market is dependent on the goodwill of a single guy?

SaltySalamander@fedia.io on 16 Jun 11:41 collapse

Such a simplistic view of the world.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 11:51 collapse

Emptying the bank accounts of billionaires and redistributing the wealth would save more lives then any philanthropy.

Stop trying to defend the people at the top of the food chain, you’re the prey they feed on.

Stovetop@lemmy.world on 17 Jun 00:53 collapse

Companies are never your friend.

Valve is like any other company. They’re as good as your money is good.

Kedly@lemm.ee on 17 Jun 12:29 collapse

Its still going after the LEAST shitty company and expecting your life to get better when the competition is FAR WORSE

Stovetop@lemmy.world on 17 Jun 14:33 collapse

Fair, but not-shitty companies eventually become shitty companies in almost every circumstance. I hate making the argument that someone is fine because they only hurt a few people compared to the guy who hurts lots.

[deleted] on 15 Jun 18:33 next collapse

.

RightHandOfIkaros@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 18:39 next collapse

This lawsuit build on a false premise. Steam doesnt have a price parity clause for other stores. What this lawsuit alleges applies to Steam keys that the developer generates through Steam. If the developer lists those keys for sale at a price lower than what the game is listed for on Steam, then the price of the Steam Store purchase price must match it, so that people visiting the store page on Steam get the same discount. It doesn’t matter if you list your game on GOG and discount it there.

Its literally helping players.

haui_lemmy@lemmy.giftedmc.com on 15 Jun 19:47 next collapse

Just for clarity: how would it do a disservice to players if a dev can sell their steam keys for any price, no matter which platform?

RandomException@sopuli.xyz on 15 Jun 20:26 next collapse

Steam is a service that costs money to keep running - lot’s of money actually in their scale. When you sell a Steam key outside of Steam, they don’t get their cut which goes toward running costs and whatnot. It doesn’t of course matter if it’s just some random few keys but if almost all devs started to do that, it could cause some serious funding problems to Valve. That could then lead to reduced service levels of Steam and that would hurt their customers - the players - the most.

So while it’s not a big problem currently, it could be if it wasn’t prevented properly in contractual level. People who think that is an unfair clause don’t probably understand what it actually takes to run a service like Steam or they are straight competitors trying to run them out of business in any way imaginable.

E: And actually if Steam still allows selling the Steam keys in external services but only requires the price to match the price in Steam, it’s already a quite charitable policy. I guess they count on not too many people buying the key externally for the same price than in Steam store.

OrgunDonor@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 06:40 collapse

Just think about how this works.

Steam currently allows you to generate keys and sell them for free, only stipulating that they must be sold for the same price as on steam.

Let’s say they are told that stipulation can’t be enforced.

Valve, will probably go with 1 of 2 options.

1 - you can no longer generate keys. So all the great key sites(GMG, Fanatical and so on) no longer exist, because no steam keys.

2 - Valve charge an upfront fee for keys generated. Now smaller pmdevs and publishers can no longer supply keys to sites, because they can’t afford the upfront costs.

What incentive does valve have to continue offering this free service? If it can be exploited for the detriment of steam, they will stop providing it.

haui_lemmy@lemmy.giftedmc.com on 16 Jun 07:10 collapse

Let me try and understand this by altering the product.

Valve now produces cars and the devs are people who make these cars inside factories. Same as is currently the case, these employees get cars cheaper and are asked to not undercut the seller by holding onto the cars for a certain amount of time before selling them used.

It does make sense for me to view it that way. One could argue that the couple cars that get sold by employees doesnt do anything to hurt the brand and that pressuring them to keep the price high manipulates the market.

Also, doesnt the work of steam accumulate to hosting mirrors of a game and hosting a large website they get billions in revenue for?

OrgunDonor@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 08:02 collapse

This analogy is so bad, it is not even close to what is happening.

I will try and adapt to cars for you(I dont know why), but this is just really really bad.

Say you have designed a car, you can produce them on a very small scale, but you have come to valve(they make cars now) to mass produce. They do so, for a 30% cut(that reduces the more they sell) for everything they sell from their direct sales at the price you have set. There is no material costs or labour costs, just that cut of the price you have set.

Now valve have a sales page and are selling, and you decide that actually I would like more people to see the car, and so you consider selling it at other dealers. Valve says, sure, you can even have the cars for free from us(no 30% cut) and you can have basically an unlimited supply of free fully built cars to sell else where. We only ask that you sell the car at the same price you have set with us if you are selling a car we made.

You want to go sell it new cheaper? You are more than welcome too, but you cant sell the car we produced.

Such a bad analogy, but that is closer to what is actually happening.

haui_lemmy@lemmy.giftedmc.com on 16 Jun 10:08 collapse

First of all, people sometimes use analogies that dont make sense to you. No need to be a dick about it. You could just make a better example.

Staying with cars, I see my mistake. Valve is not producing the cars in this example, valve is doing the car sales for the (small) manufacturer. They dont provide any part of the car, only the exposure and surrounding community. Its not nothing but has zero to do with the product.

What they are asking is „you can sell cars from our showroom, just dont sell them for cheaper than we do“. Which does make sense.

stardust@lemmy.ca on 15 Jun 21:09 collapse

Seems like that’d be hard to track with so many stores selling steam keys just looking at isthereanydeals.

Weird thing is it is the publishers themselves that are able to set the price so they are choosing not to put the game on sale same as it is elsewhere. Probably to not devalue the price of their game like the Nintendo strategy when it comes to certain storefronts.

furikuri@programming.dev on 16 Jun 02:35 collapse

Probably operates closer to corporate software licensing deals, i.e. “we might not catch you but if we do it’s over”

Franconian_Nomad@feddit.de on 15 Jun 19:07 next collapse

Smells like a smear campaign. Some idiots try to get some fake-ass grass roots movement going.

Bold move, let‘s see how it plays out for them.

Dadifer@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 21:26 collapse

I actually was sort of on board after I read the article. Why should a publisher be penalized if they offer a lower price on a different platform?

stardust@lemmy.ca on 15 Jun 21:42 next collapse

Do they? Haven’t felt like that s the case as a long time user of /r/gamedeals and isthereanydeals which is all focused on game sales.

SuperIce@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 01:46 next collapse

They don’t really though. They’re talking about selling steam keys in a different platform, not selling the game on a different platform (like Epic Games for instance). You can sell the game for cheaper on Epic or GOG if you want to.

Aielman15@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 08:32 collapse

When new video game stores were opening that charged much lower commissions than Valve, I decided that I would provide my game “Overgrowth” at a lower price to take advantage of the lower commission rates. I intended to write a blog post about the results. But when I asked Valve about this plan, they replied that they would remove Overgrowth from Steam if I allowed it to be sold at a lower price anywhere, even from my own website without Steam keys and without Steam’s DRM.

From the source cited by the article.

Saik0Shinigami@lemmy.saik0.com on 16 Jun 15:23 collapse

overgrowth.wolfire.com/buy-now/

Buy Overgrowth On humble bundle

So why is the game still on steam then if that “cited” information was accurate? The humble bundle sells the game without DRM.

store.steampowered.com/app/25000/Overgrowth/

Something stinks here… and it’s not Steam.

Aielman15@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 17:29 collapse

So why is the game still on steam then if that “cited” information was accurate?

Because Steam is the largest storefront with the biggest userbase and forfeiting those sales is a death sentence for developers.

Saik0Shinigami@lemmy.saik0.com on 16 Jun 17:33 collapse

The source makes a claim that selling off platform without DRM would get them delisted from Steam.

I found you a link showing they do exactly that.

So the developer is either lying… or the source is lying… or the article writer is lying.

Aielman15@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 17:43 collapse

The source makes a claim that selling off platform at a lower price than Steam would get them delisted. You linked the Steam page ($19,50) and the Wolfire.com page ($19,99), so what’s your point? Reread the post.

[…] they [Steam] replied that they would remove Overgrowth from Steam if I allowed it to be sold at a lower price anywhere, even from my own website without Steam keys and without Steam’s DRM.

Saik0Shinigami@lemmy.saik0.com on 16 Jun 17:49 collapse

… You’re making shit up and lying at the same time. Here, lets squash this bullshit argument once and for all. Please somehow make this make sense. It’s not only cheaper… but a choice of WITH or WITHOUT steam drm and the developer is already doing it.

OFF STEAM with or without steam DRM: $19.95

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.saik0.com/pictrs/image/f4ec951d-97c4-440e-93eb-dfc21c0733d5.png">

ON STEAM: $19.99

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.saik0.com/pictrs/image/8d9bfede-de36-4939-a431-4b00fca0ec90.png">

Edit: I can add more arrows if you’d like.

Aielman15@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 18:09 collapse

I’m not making shit up though, I’m literally citing the source of the article that this entire comment section is writing about.

Maybe Humble Bundle has a deal with Steam. Maybe Steam doesn’t care about going after a developer for selling a game five cents cheaper on another storefront. I don’t know, and I’m not going around accusing people of wrongdoing on the basis of some kind of conspiracy theory (“something stinks”).

If the lawsuit turns out to be fake, that’s good, and users are safe. If it turns out to be true, then great, they’ll make Steam to change their practices, just like they forced them to allow users to refund their games under certain circumstances.

I’m sure as hell not jumping into a comment section spending my time defending a multi-million dollars corporations that already overpays lawyers to do that.

(Btw I saw the game on Steam as 19,50 and forgot to check the currency; it’s actually euros on my screen and I was comparing it to the 19,95 dollars from Bundle, so yeah, my bad.)

Saik0Shinigami@lemmy.saik0.com on 16 Jun 18:27 collapse

I’m sure as hell not jumping into a comment section spending my time defending a multi-million dollars corporations that already overpays lawyers to do that.

I’m not defending anything. Nothing I’ve said was in defense of Steam. However it was the most basic of fact check for this “Developer” or “source”. Which has shown/proven to already be bullshit. YOU are amplifying that message for some reason without doing the most fundamental of a fact check.

And yes… when I detect bullshit… I’m going to call it out. Bullshit stinks.

Aielman15@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 19:11 collapse

IMO the fact that the developer is selling the game five cents cheaper on another storefront doesn’t prove that it’s bullshit. As I said, it could just be that Steam doesn’t care enough to go after them for a five cents difference, or they allowed it on that specific case after the developer sued them in 2021, or maybe who knows, it’s an entirely different reason. Calling it “bullshit” without even knowing the context is way too rushed.

Saik0Shinigami@lemmy.saik0.com on 16 Jun 19:14 collapse

They made a claim… A claim that you can readily show they’re clearly ALREADY doing. They need to GIVE the context.

They chose not to. I’m not going to jump on their bandwagon on just blind faith. I’m going to question their claim because they’re already doing what they claim they cannot do. However the fact that they chose to omit that context that they should have provided from the outset is itself damning. People don’t omit facts that would prove their point. They do however make statements that are inconsistent when they’re lying.

Nibodhika@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 06:30 collapse

They don’t. The thing most people who have never published a game on steam don’t know is that valve gives you infinite steam keys (for free) that you can give or sell as you wish. This is to allow studios/publishers to give keys to whoever they want, and also allows them to sell those keys on their own or third-party websites. This is a HUGE deal, Valve is letting studios/publishers sell games on a separate site without charging anything while hosting the game themselves. The only condition to those keys is that they can’t be sold cheaper than on Steam.

That’s a completely different thing from what you’re claiming. This means that games can be cheaper on GoG, Epic, etc as long as they don’t give you a steam key together (which they could, for free).

ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de on 15 Jun 20:21 next collapse

“Charges 30% fee” “That’s too high! You’re ripping us off”

“Charges 10% fee” “That’s too low! No other platforms could hope to compete against you with that!”

This is nothing but people bitching about nothing for the price gouging. I will give merit to the anti competitive nature if game makers aren’t allowed to have their games listed for less at other stores. As far as add on game packages locking you in goes…that might be a technical minefield to ensure compatibility.

Shard@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 01:44 next collapse

Conspiracy theory here…

Maybe this is an initiative by competing platforms? Epic? Ubisoft?

Stir some shit, hope to get valve in legal issues so that they’re legally forced to become less competitive and therefore creating a chance for these other platforms?

Carighan@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 06:32 next collapse

Of course it is.

All those large online action/claim sites are commercial in underlying nature. When you saw all the small farmers protest in Germany it was primarily driven as an action by about 5 large farming conglomerates because they are the ones getting ~85% of the grant money that was being cut. The whole point of the cut was to not funnel money that was supposed to go to small farmers to large megacorps after all. Who in turn instrumentalized the small farmers to protest it.

Probably what’s going on here, too. You can bet somewhere deep deep down, this is something Tim Sweeney cooked up.

fmstrat@lemmy.nowsci.com on 16 Jun 11:52 next collapse

This of course. Any reduction in fee would not go the people. Studios would raise their prices.

BalooWasWahoo@links.hackliberty.org on 16 Jun 13:11 collapse

Of course it is. There is a similar case in the US right now, or was, by the dude behind the fighting rabbits game and parts of the humble bundle that was being bankrolled in his lawsuit by epic games.

Nibodhika@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 06:22 next collapse

Yes, if Valve limited the price games could have in other stores that would be anti-competitive, but that’s not the case. Their price parity clause is just for selling steam keys.

ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de on 17 Jun 01:31 collapse

Then the entire lawsuit hope is pretty much bs.

JustEnoughDucks@feddit.nl on 16 Jun 15:13 collapse

This lawsuit being funded by a Epic Games shell company would not be surprising in the least. They have done so much and stooped so low to try to not have to actually do work and create a good platform.

Rayspekt@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 20:32 next collapse

Tim Sweeney, is this you?

Delonix@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 20:55 next collapse

Sue Meta or Google instead geez

Copernican@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 22:24 next collapse

How is Lemmy so anti corporate, but bends over backwards to defend steam as an immaculate corporation. I love steam, and 90% of my game purchases or from their store. 5% are from stores that let me redeem steam keys.

I think their market position should have some scrutiny.

catloaf@lemm.ee on 15 Jun 22:33 next collapse

Lemmy is not a monolith.

Copernican@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 11:15 collapse

Obviously. I’m Lemmy and against that. But there are dominant pov’s on Lemmy that saturate threads and are reflected in up votes and down votes

Fubarberry@sopuli.xyz on 15 Jun 23:35 next collapse

A few reasons:

  • I feel like any other major company with Steam’s marketshare would be far less consumer friendly than steam.

  • Steam funnels a lot of money into Linux, and Linux is very popular on Lemmy. If you use Linux, you are benefiting from Steam’s success.

  • Steam is just nice to use, and has good deals. It’s nice to have my games in one place, and I don’t know if any other storefront with as many nice user benefiting features as steam.

Copernican@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 10:21 collapse

I agree with all these things. But I dont understand the hail corporate mentality of being upset or knee jerk defending steam. I’m curious to see where the suit goes and evaluate if I should consider joining a class action suit as I learn more.

vaultdweller013@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 14:22 next collapse

I think theres also the secondary unstated factor some of us have, that being that Steam is working as a solid buffer against more malignant groups. The fact that Steam is for a lack of a better term incorruptible is frankly very useful, especially with groups like the Saudis and China investing a lot of money and influence into gaming recently. Better a flawed but ultimately decent corporation than whatever the fuck the Saudis or China would replace it with.

Kedly@lemm.ee on 17 Jun 21:31 collapse

Its more we’re defending against Steams competition and dont want to see them gain any ground (Except itch and GoG, they’re cool)

the_toast_is_gone@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 00:03 next collapse

They’re not immaculate. They used to outright deny people the right to refund their games, but they turned that around after a massive lawsuit from a government agency. Good change! I support that. But they’re not behaving in an anti-competitive manner. What, are they supposed to intentionally make themselves worse in the hopes that other stores pop up? That’s not how any of this works.

SuperIce@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 01:48 next collapse

Mainly because Steam actually provides a really good quality service. Most corporations over time charge more while getting worse on quality. People can sell their games for cheaper on Epic which only has a 12% fee, but Epic’s service is much worse.

furikuri@programming.dev on 16 Jun 02:48 collapse

Yup. If Steam wasn’t around I’d have the joy of choosing between Epic, Origin, GOG (actually not bad but no official Linux client can be annoying), or GFWL (which would probably still be around in this situation)

Kedly@lemm.ee on 17 Jun 12:37 collapse

We’ll let their position have some scrutiny when the PC marketplace has some actual decent competition, I’d rather not shoot the PC gaming sphere in the foot just because Lemmy hates corporations.

Kolanaki@yiffit.net on 16 Jun 01:40 next collapse

Why is the 30% publishing cut of dev sales thing even part of a CLA of players? It literally doesn’t affect them.

[deleted] on 16 Jun 02:06 collapse

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Kolanaki@yiffit.net on 16 Jun 02:08 next collapse

If games on Steam were 30% more expensive than anywhere else, you (and the lawsuit’s plaintiffs) might have had a point.

[deleted] on 16 Jun 02:31 collapse

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stardust@lemmy.ca on 16 Jun 03:07 next collapse

Steam also enforce a strict key price parity.

Do they?

isthereanydeal.com/game/helldivers-2/info/

if you think a 30% cut doesn’t reflect on the cost a player is paying, you’re out of your mind. This is business 101.

Isn’t business 101 charging as much as possible and not passing on savings to customers, and trying to capture as much high paying consumers as possible before being forced to start capturing price sensitive consumers with discounts?

Price of games that didn’t release on Steam seem to reflect that. Even games released by platform owners like Sony or Nintendo first party exclusives and the beloved Blizzard. Isn’t that pricing strategy business 101 as opposed to this belief that savings pass onto consumers? Lowering price right away doesn’t seem like good price maximizing strategy when goal would be to increase retail price consumers are willing to pay over time.

Kayana@ttrpg.network on 16 Jun 04:08 next collapse

As far as I know, they do - for Steam keys. If you’re selling your game through other stores, not just a Steam key, there aren’t any demands placed upon you. The OC might’ve been talking about that.

stardust@lemmy.ca on 16 Jun 04:21 collapse

Those are steam keys.

I’ve bought most of games through other sites because the games would be discounted lower and sooner than Steam. So it’s more personal experience than theory in my case.

Humble bundles on the even more extreme end of like 8 games sometimes being cheaper than a single title has ever been discounted.

Kayana@ttrpg.network on 16 Jun 05:03 collapse

Huh, interesting… You know, I’ve never really wondered about Humble Bundle specifically, but you’re right, they seem to be selling your run-of-the-mill Steam keys, or at least you can activate them effortlessly in Steam. Maybe it’s a case of Steam themselves handing out keys (instead of the publishers) to increase user retention? I honestly don’t know, this is all just speculation.

I actually didn’t click on your link at first, because I assumed it would just show other stores where you could purchase the whole game instead of a key, so I’m sorry that you had to clarify that.

stardust@lemmy.ca on 16 Jun 05:42 collapse

Isthereanydeals is a great resource. I always make sure to look up a game there before buying to check what the lowest price it was ever sold was.

That link was for helldivers 2 which is only available on steam on pc. From what I understand the keys are actually provided by the devs/publishers and steam doesn’t get a cut of key sales.

ashok36@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 12:00 collapse

Yes. You understand how pricing works. The stores charge what the market will bear. That’s why games had been stuck at $60 since the 360/PS3 era.

Nibodhika@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 06:19 collapse

Steam also enforce a strict key price parity.

No it doesn’t. The price parity thing is only if you are selling the game on Steam platform, i.e. selling a steam key, it’s essentially a way to allow publishers to sell the game on their own website, without paying the 30% to steam, but don’t allow them to undercut steam entirely while still taking advantage of their platform.

Games on GoG, itch, Epic store, etc, can have any price they want, as long as they don’t give away a steam key valve doesn’t care what price you sell your game elsewhere.

This is one of the most annoying fake news out there, Valve are going above and beyond what any other store is doing, and they get bad rep from people who have never read their policy, published a game there, or talked to anyone who has.

crossmr@kbin.run on 16 Jun 14:37 collapse

They do prevent you from linking to your own store within your Steam game though. Even though they don't provide a complete solution for things like microtransactions and DLC.

How it works on Steam:

  1. User makes an in-app purchase using the steam wallet integration
  2. Steam processes the payment taking 30% and gives you a reference number for that transaction
  3. You query that transaction every time the player logs in to see if they've refunded it or not. That transaction doesn't actually contain any information about what they bought though.
  4. You then maintain a separate purchasing server whose whole job it is is to keep a record of what the player purchased in reference to that transaction number.

For that Valve wants 30% of in-app/DLC purchases. At that point it's stripe and nothing more. Unlike standalone DLC Or expansions, these unlock purchases don't come with serving any additional content in the form of downloads.

If you make your own service to handle these transactions (with only a 3-4% transaction rate) Valve will prevent you from linking to it, or mentioning it anywhere on your page, forums or within the game itself. You need to direct players elsewhere and then mention it. Even for cross-platform games where having Steam maintain a transaction list for a portion of the users is just a needless additional layer.

Nibodhika@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 17:08 collapse

I know how Valve’s publisher API works, others are similar in case you didn’t know. But that is only true for games that need online validation of some sort, DLCs for offline games don’t need to implement this.

Valve is hosting the game, providing the storefront and bringing in a lot of customers. If you didn’t think those 30% were worth it you would not have put your game on steam.

Plus all of this is irrelevant to the point that Valve doesn’t enforce price parity.

crossmr@kbin.run on 16 Jun 19:02 collapse

For the base game, which I think 30% is still more, I think it certainly makes sense.
Because they're providing a complete solution.

For in-app purchases or unlock purchases, whether or not the purchase is in-app, the solution isn't complete, and not worth the 30% they charge on those transactions. It would be trivial for every transaction to have a custom field where you could store an array of what was purchased in in that purchase and have it returned when the transaction was checked. Boom, complete solution. Specifically for in-app purchases if they wanted to take 5% since all they're doing is the job of Stripe and nothing more, then I'd consider that fair.

Carighan@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 06:29 collapse

Certainly not the players, given current costs - where Steam is virtually always cheaper than elsewhere.

cheddar@programming.dev on 16 Jun 05:53 next collapse

My favorite recent example:

…steampowered.com/…/Banishers_Ghosts_of_New_Eden/ (50 EUR)

playstation.com/…/banishers-ghosts-of-new-eden/ (60 EUR)

PS5 game on sale did cost 2 EUR less than the regular price on Steam. I don’t think Steam overcharges me. It’s not like the game is cheaper somewhere else on PC either: …epicgames.com/…/banishers-ghosts-of-new-eden-f9e… (50 EUR)

crossmr@kbin.run on 16 Jun 14:25 collapse

Console prices aren't really relevant to Steam. Consoles always tend to run higher.

cheddar@programming.dev on 16 Jun 14:47 collapse

Yes, but they sue Steam that has competitors selling games for the same price instead of literal monopolies. Even Apple was forced to open up to other app stores.

BigTrout75@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 06:00 next collapse

How can this be? All the games I buy on Steam are cheaper than on other platforms. Where are these cheaper games?

Simulation6@sopuli.xyz on 16 Jun 09:57 next collapse

I think that is the main point of the lawsuit, if developers sell their game on Steam they can’t sell it cheaper somewhere else. If Value gets 30% the developer has to raise the price a bit to compensate and they have to raise it everywhere. Outside of sales I don’t think most games that are not on Steam are much cheaper elsewhere, so not sure how this plays out.

samus12345@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 13:46 next collapse

So don’t sell the game on Steam? Either the huge boost in visibility is worth a 30% cut or it’s not.

masterspace@lemmy.ca on 17 Jun 12:27 collapse

If you have a point to make about why Valves is not abusing it’s monopoly position make it. Otherwise no one wants to hear your dumb ‘but the free market is always right’ statement.

trafficnab@lemmy.ca on 17 Jun 09:19 collapse

As far as I know, this only applies to Steam keys: developers are allowed to generate Steam keys for free to sell on their website (Valve does not get 30% of these sales either) with the restriction being they cannot be cheaper than the price on Steam

I don’t think there’s ever actually been any proof that Valve disallows selling games for cheaper elsewhere as long as you’re not selling those freely generated Steam keys

masterspace@lemmy.ca on 17 Jun 12:25 collapse

Proof? What would proof look like?

Do you expect companies to just leak contracts they signed while under NDA?

ByteJunk@lemmy.world on 17 Jun 12:45 collapse

Not the companies. But some anonymous whistleblower? Sure

masterspace@lemmy.ca on 17 Jun 15:10 collapse

Like the anonymous whistleblower who went to a lawyer and triggered this lawsuit?

trafficnab@lemmy.ca on 18 Jun 01:30 collapse

This suit seems to just be vaguely, “30% is too high”, along with requiring that DLC for a game bought on Steam also be bought on Steam, it was the Wolfire case back in 2021 that alleged they’re not allowed to sell their game for cheaper on other platforms

masterspace@lemmy.ca on 18 Jun 01:41 collapse

According to Shotbolt, the developer and digital distribution company is “shutting out” all competition in the PC gaming market as it “forces” game publishers to sign off on price parity obligations - supposedly preventing them from going on to offer lower prices on other platforms.

trafficnab@lemmy.ca on 18 Jun 03:38 collapse

This is true and public knowledge though as I said (details seen here in the “Steam Key Rules and Guidelines” section), if anything Valve is giving devs a lot of leeway by allowing them to do that at all, not only are they giving up their 30% cut but are also then distributing and committing to updating those copies of the game for free

masterspace@lemmy.ca on 18 Jun 12:59 collapse

The allegation says nothing about steam keys. The lawsuit is alleging that they are contractually prevented from selling the game cheaper elsewhere.

Donut@leminal.space on 16 Jun 10:59 next collapse

That’s exactly what they’re trying to say. It could have been cheaper if Valve didn’t have pricing clauses that doesn’t allow developers to price things cheaper elsewhere.

PM_Your_Nudes_Please@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 14:42 collapse

Which is deceptive, at best. Steam doesn’t have pricing clauses for developers’ games. The devs are free to sell their games anywhere they want, at whatever prices they want. But Steam does have pricing clauses for Steam keys. Basically, what allows you to register a game to your Steam account.

You can sell your game for whatever price you want, as long as it’s not the Steam version of the game. They don’t want you giving away Steam keys for cheaper than you can often buy them on Steam. And this makes sense; Steam has a vested interest in protecting their own game keys, and encouraging players to shop on a storefront that they know is reputable; Lots of steam key resellers are notoriously shady, for instance.

Basically, the dev can go sell it cheaper on GoG, or Epic, or their own storefront if they want. As long as they’re not selling Steam keys, they’re fine. But players like having games registered to their Steam accounts, because it puts everything in one place. So devs may feel shoehorned into selling Steam keys (which would invoke that pricing clause) instead of selling a separate version that isn’t registered to Steam. But that doesn’t mean Steam is preventing publishers from selling elsewhere, or controlling the prices on those third party sites. It just means Steam has market pull, and publishers know the game will sell better if it’s offered as a Steam key.

Donut@leminal.space on 16 Jun 15:21 collapse

Yep, I was only summarizing their angle. Here are the specifics for anyone who wants to read the source documentation: partner.steamgames.com/doc/features/keys#3

The only thing that doesn’t sit right with me is developers stating Steam threatened to delist the game when they expressed wanting to sell elsewhere. I haven’t seen any proof except just the statements, but it would be weird for a developer to lie about that stuff. If anyone has any more sources on that, it would be appreciated

jalkasieni@sopuli.xyz on 16 Jun 21:06 collapse

Given that said game is also for sale on the Humble Store, I find those statements dubious at best.

Kekin@lemy.lol on 17 Jun 15:43 collapse

The one example I can think of is the Remnant games, at least for Remnant 2 on release it was cheaper on Epic Store than on Steam, by like 10 USD if I recall correctly

Mr_Dr_Oink@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 10:11 next collapse

What a load of rubbish.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 11:16 next collapse

In 2022 the median household income in the USA was $74 580, that means 50% of households had less than $74 580 in income.

A person that has at least a billion in wealth (like Gabe Newell) owns at least the equivalent of 13 409 times the median income.

I would love to illustrate it by copy pasting $74580 13409 times, but it creates a comment too long Lemmy.

If we go by net worth instead?

www.fool.com/…/average-net-worth-americans/

5190 US medians, 25 615 US medians for people under 35 (the crowd on this platform).

No one deserves that kind of wealth and anything that’s done to prevent it is a good thing.

jorp@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 14:00 next collapse

Your point is valid but this kind of lawsuit isn’t really the way to go about the change you’re describing

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 21:03 collapse

Suing them because they’re making too much profit isn’t the way to go to make it so they’re prevented from making too much profit in the future…

Eh…

Ok

jorp@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 22:08 collapse

yes you’re right this is a lawsuit about too much profit and it will directly set a precedent where companies aren’t allowed to have too much profit.

Pretty smart, as a leftist maybe I’ll sue every corporation for being privately owned, this is a whole new avenue for systemic change. You opened my eyes

Aux@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 16:10 next collapse

Wealth is not money.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jun 20:52 collapse

That’s why I included both numbers, but if you know how to deal with your finances, at some point wealth is pretty much the same as money.

Aux@lemmy.world on 17 Jun 07:29 collapse

You have confused the two numbers. Again, what is NOT money.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 17 Jun 09:07 collapse

Check my comment

I talk about wealth then I talk about income, compare both, then I compare wealth to net worth (which is how you measure wealth)

If you have enough wealth, it’s used to get money as your wealth is used as collateral, you don’t need to be rich to do that, you just need to own stuff that is paid for. I know people who only own a house that isn’t worth a fortune, the got a mortgage on it when the rates were down to 1% to invest it at a higher interest rate, their not rich, they just have wealth that can be used as collateral to get money.

MehBlah@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 18:25 collapse

I saw some stats the other day that if you remove the top 1000 incomes in the united states the average drops to around 35k. So that average of 75k is bullshit.

lYlantis@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 18:47 collapse

Median != Average.

BluesF@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 22:49 collapse

The median is an average. But it isn’t the mean, which is presumably what the other comment was using.

bitfucker@programming.dev on 16 Jun 17:56 next collapse

I’ll reiterate here that I think it would be funny to see steam actually lowering their cut to 20-10% or something and the mass migrations of developers from other competing stores to steam, and finally making the other store even more insignificant. That’s what they want isn’t it? And even more funny when after the changes are applied there is no difference in price because after all, publishers get more money for free, why should they lower their profit? If anything, when the policy is reversed/back to when it was, we will only see an increase in game price lol.

echodot@feddit.uk on 18 Jun 10:11 collapse

The thing is when people put games on Steam they account for the fee that they take. So in a sort of way the lawsuit is right, Valve are effectively causing players to get overcharged for games.

But if I put the same game on both Steam and GoG And make the gog one 20% cheaper, I still get more sales on the Steam page. If I only have it on GOG people actually complain even when you point out that it’s cheaper that way.

So Valve are causing players to get overcharged but players are forcing publishers to put their games on Steam. So players are causing players to get overcharged, so what can you do?

bitfucker@programming.dev on 18 Jun 11:17 collapse

Alright, I don’t have the data nor time to research it now. But just try to check the pricing on EGS when a game was exclusive there AND after the exclusive deals run out AND the game is then sold on steam. Did the price increase? Or if that feels flawed (which I get it, maybe the dev has no intensive to change the price), try to get the average cost of those exclusive AAA games from other stores and compare it with average AAA games on steam. See how different it is.

hark@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 19:28 next collapse

I won’t say no to cheaper games. The 30% cut was settled upon in the days where physical copies were the norm and Steam was still under heavy development. Given how established Steam and digital distribution in general is, it’s not really fair to developers to dedicate almost a third of the price of the game to a hosting platform. Yes, exposure is important, but that’s a service provided passively due to the fact of being the largest platform. Reducing Steam’s cut hurts no one except maybe Gabe’s ability to buy another yacht (and even then, not likely). Even if customers don’t see lower prices if Steam were to reduce their cut, it’d be great to see the actual developers getting more money from the games they put all the effort into making.

bitfucker@programming.dev on 16 Jun 19:47 next collapse

They being the largest platform because the consumer wanted their service, not out of obligation. Epic provides cheaper cut for the developer and is steadily building up their library. But why don’t users flock there? Heck, they even have some actual exclusive titles there. EA and Ubisoft too got their own store, and they too got a few exclusive title. So why does steam is still being chosen? Maybe there is other value provided besides hosting, like, idk, remote play? Controller remap? Family sharing? Opening linux gaming market? Social feature? Forum? Modding?

hark@lemmy.world on 16 Jun 21:23 collapse

Momentum. Steam was among the first on the scene and provided the best experience. Thankfully Steam has kept the momentum going instead of enshittification (thanks to being a privately held company), but almost a third of the price of the game is still ridiculous if you consider the effort that goes into making a game vs maintaining a mature platform.

Kedly@lemm.ee on 17 Jun 12:35 next collapse

Its not momentum, its that the competition is garbage

bitfucker@programming.dev on 17 Jun 19:43 collapse

I mean, did the competitor even make an announcement to have at least feature parity with steam? Last time I heard, GOG doesn’t have regional pricing, Epic is not supporting linux just because, and EA/Ubisoft is just a glorified ad

asexualchangeling@lemmy.ml on 17 Jun 00:08 collapse

I won’t say no to cheaper games.

Ahh yes prices will magically lower to match what publishers were already making, because companies famously are never greedy

hark@lemmy.world on 17 Jun 00:36 next collapse

The end of my post is where I address this. Publishers have the option to use their bigger cut to reduce prices, but even if they don’t, money is moving closer to the people actually making the games possible instead of a platform provider. There are also a lot of indie developers. It’s not just all greedy publishers.

Rayspekt@lemmy.world on 17 Jun 16:07 collapse

Somehow production costs increased exactly as much as valve’s cut got reduced. Crazy, ain’t it?

Lets_Eat_Grandma@lemm.ee on 17 Jun 13:31 collapse

yay billion dollar lawyer paycheck