• Snot Flickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    10 months ago

    There really isn’t. This is personal opinion.

    Some of us just have issues with Epic Games. Some others have issues with Valve.

    No private company is really “good.”

    But the argument with Epic is things like:

    • They brought “exclusives” to PC gaming for the first time. Previously, a PC game was a PC game, and it didn’t matter what storefront you bought it from, because it was available at all storefronts. Epic chose to pay companies to restrict their titles just to Epic, in an attempt to move the market towards them.

    • In a similar vein, trying to fight Valve’s dominance, they started giving away free games. They have been firing people left and right because their financials are in the toilet, and yet they’re still pissing away money on free games and exclusives to their store.

    • People who care about access to music and paying artists hate them because they have effectively put a death warrant on Bandcamp, buying them for two years, doing nothing with the product, and then selling it to Hedge Fund fuckies who already shitcanned half the staff and the site is officially on life support. They basically killed the last place you could buy music and make sure all the proceeds went to the artist and not a middle man (Bandcamp Fridays).

    • During all of this, they refused to spend any money on actually improving their fucking game store. Things that have been staples of Steam for a decade now are still on a waiting list of features to be added. The User Experience for Epic Games Store is just bad, bad, bad, bad. There’s no excuse for it, especially when they chose to piss money away on exclusives and free games instead of paying people to produce a better product than Valve has. They refused to even try to release a better product, believing they could buy their way to dominance.

    Do you really want to support a company that doesn’t give a flying fuck about your user experience as a customer and has such bad business plans that they’re letting go tons of staff? It’s bad enough that they had a bad business plan, but it also seems like they’re not very good to their employees, either. Compared to Valve’s “flat” management where there are no managers, or where Newell famously paid the writer for Portal to “be sick” for two years while he had a serious disease. “Your job here at Valve is to get better.” This was before he wrote Portal, no less.

    One company clearly cares about the user experience that their users experience, and one clearly cares about using every tool at their disposal to be the top of the market, everything from paying for exclusives and free games to suing in court to try to carve out a niche for yourself where you don’t have to pay vendor fees.

    Of course, I also encourage you to do your own research and come to your own conclusions. Valve offers a better product, better user experience, and treats their employees with more respect, but it doesn’t mean Valve hasn’t made their own share of anti-consumer decisions.

    • Lmaydev@programming.dev
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      10 months ago

      I totally disagree with the exclusives point.

      So, so many games can only be brought on steam. It’s always been that way.

    • otp@sh.itjust.works
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      10 months ago

      Do you really want to support a company

      I don’t think getting freebies from them counts as supporting them

      • ono@lemmy.ca
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        10 months ago

        I don’t think getting freebies from them counts as supporting them

        I do. Some examples off the top of my head:

        • giving them access to your stored data, by letting their code execute on your computer
        • giving them access to your behavioral data (a form of biometrics), through the same
        • giving them access to your system fingerprints, through both code execution and account creation
        • giving them legal influence over you, by agreeing to their terms
        • giving some of their legal arguments greater weight, by increasing their market share
        • giving them greater sway with publishers, such as when seeking exclusivity deals, by bolstering their user count

        There are probably other ways in which it supports them. Those are just the first ones to come to mind.

        • otp@sh.itjust.works
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          10 months ago

          Ok, but they give free games so it’s cool. They’ll surely make a lot of money off of my “never pays us” behavioural data

        • miss_brainfart@lemmy.ml
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          10 months ago

          I think it’s funny how people create accounts only to never actually spend any money on this platform

        • otp@sh.itjust.works
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          10 months ago

          Of course it’s part of the equation.

          It’s part of the equation on Steam and GOG, too.

          So unless you bought a physical copy of this game and kept it off the internet (not sure if anyone is collecting any data through FO3 itself), or got it gifted to you through GOG and you don’t have an account there, you’re in the same boat. Except you paid for the game with money in addition to data.