I really hope Gabe lives for another 20+ years. Steam has its issues but they are few and far between in comparison to the alternatives. And I’m afraid that when he passes, whoever takes up the mantle will go public, or sell, enshittifing the platform.
I’ve got half a mind to buy on GOG instead, just to get some more assurances around access in the distant future when Gabe passes. Steam just provides such a better service with controller support and the reviews though.
GOG does have cloud saves and actually provides a more convenient way to manage them, unlike Steam, which kept restoring my ancient RimWorld saves for hours until I could finally convince it to get rid of them.
However, the storage space is smaller than Steam. Also, there’s no equivalent of Steam’s Workshop on GOG.
DRM-free is the biggest positive of GOG. Steam Family Sharing recently has been just so pro-consumer as well though. I gave my mate my old steam deck after getting the OLED deck, and he’s now got a library of 200+ games right out the gate.
I doubt it, if you are concerned if I’m the person you’re thinking of you should tag me, or go through my post history.
That being said, Gabe owns 50.1% of the company. If he dies, and transfers that to one person, it doesn’t matter what his employees think, public or private, unless the bylaws for the corporation (yes, a private company like steam is still a corporation) state otherwise, the majority shareholder can vote on future direction and win.
Additionally, you underestimate tech employees and their willingness to exit on the right terms. If valve becomes valued at 100 billion dollars, and they can exit with their 1 percent stock at 45 years old, neither them or their family will ever need to work a day again and they can exit the global firestorm and live on an island somewhere.
I really hope Gabe lives for another 20+ years. Steam has its issues but they are few and far between in comparison to the alternatives. And I’m afraid that when he passes, whoever takes up the mantle will go public, or sell, enshittifing the platform.
I’ve got half a mind to buy on GOG instead, just to get some more assurances around access in the distant future when Gabe passes. Steam just provides such a better service with controller support and the reviews though.
GOG is fine but it has a tiny library by comparison, lacks pretty much all the features of Steam, and doesn’t support Linux at all.
Can’t argue with that, it would be nice for GOG to have:
Those are really steam’s best features, and if GOG had those I’d likely stop buying steam games
GOG does have cloud saves and actually provides a more convenient way to manage them, unlike Steam, which kept restoring my ancient RimWorld saves for hours until I could finally convince it to get rid of them.
However, the storage space is smaller than Steam. Also, there’s no equivalent of Steam’s Workshop on GOG.
Ah that’s good to know, thanks!
DRM-free is the biggest positive of GOG. Steam Family Sharing recently has been just so pro-consumer as well though. I gave my mate my old steam deck after getting the OLED deck, and he’s now got a library of 200+ games right out the gate.
Afaik gog galaxy does do cloud saves.
Are you the person that posts that under every Valve post here on Lemmy? Because they make no sense.
Valve is a small company in terms of employees and all of them make good money already.
They grew by not going for enshitification, and all of them know it.
Yeah but think of the short term profits they could make with some enshitification, it would be enough for at least like two yachts per shareholder
I doubt it, if you are concerned if I’m the person you’re thinking of you should tag me, or go through my post history.
That being said, Gabe owns 50.1% of the company. If he dies, and transfers that to one person, it doesn’t matter what his employees think, public or private, unless the bylaws for the corporation (yes, a private company like steam is still a corporation) state otherwise, the majority shareholder can vote on future direction and win.
Additionally, you underestimate tech employees and their willingness to exit on the right terms. If valve becomes valued at 100 billion dollars, and they can exit with their 1 percent stock at 45 years old, neither them or their family will ever need to work a day again and they can exit the global firestorm and live on an island somewhere.
You’re putting far too much altruism on everyone.