How about you get a car then?lacktheknack said:Because it's faster and easier.bandman232 said:I must be the only person on Earth that hates Steam. The way I see it, why waste 3 hours downloading a game when you can get it off a disc, install it, and then play it with in the next 5 minutes?
Let's say I'm trying to buy Skyrim. This is a recount of a real experience.
I have to get on a bus, wait for twenty minutes, get on a train, wait for ten more minutes, then I have to wend my way through a mall's bus depot (five minutes), get into the mall itself, strongarm my way through the crowds to the local EBGames (ten minutes), find it's not even there (seriously, EBGames sucks), get back to the train (fifteen minutes), wait because the train is delayed and then ride it back (fifteen minutes), wait twenty minutes for another bus, take a fifteen minute bus ride to the local Future Shop, set off the alarm on the way in and lose ten minutes with dumb people trying to demagnetize my jacket, find that they've sold out, walk over to the nearest Best Buy (ten minutes, three near-fatalities because people cannot drive), grab the last copy, stand there for five minutes as some douche berates me for daring to take the last copy because it was clearly HIS, stand in line for twenty minutes, pay for it, get outside, miss my bus, stand there for forty five minutes before finding out I missed the last one, walk to a nearby bus stop to catch a different one (ten minutes), miss it again, scream in fury and walk home (two and a half hours).
And it started raining half way there.
Which method was better again?
I have been using Steam since 2007 and not once have I had a decent experience with it. It was such a hassle trying to get my Orange box to work, and even then support was completely unhelpful. Added to the fave that it takes forever to download something (6 hours for TF2? Are you fucking kidding me?) compounded with the procrastination of HL3, makes me now officially hate Valve. The retarded community doesn't help either.Adam Jensen said:Because some people live 5 hours away from the nearest retailer? Because it takes longer to get it through mail? Because some people think Steam is more convenient? Because of Steam sales and awesome customer support?bandman232 said:I must be the only person on Earth that hates Steam. The way I see it, why waste 3 hours downloading a game when you can get it off a disc, install it, and then play it with in the next 5 minutes?
That is a very troll statement. Steam is convenient for many people hence why its so popular. Nit picking people's reasons by using blanket statements is just your way of not admitting the other person has a legit point of viewbandman232 said:How about you get a car then?lacktheknack said:Because it's faster and easier.bandman232 said:I must be the only person on Earth that hates Steam. The way I see it, why waste 3 hours downloading a game when you can get it off a disc, install it, and then play it with in the next 5 minutes?
Let's say I'm trying to buy Skyrim. This is a recount of a real experience.
I have to get on a bus, wait for twenty minutes, get on a train, wait for ten more minutes, then I have to wend my way through a mall's bus depot (five minutes), get into the mall itself, strongarm my way through the crowds to the local EBGames (ten minutes), find it's not even there (seriously, EBGames sucks), get back to the train (fifteen minutes), wait because the train is delayed and then ride it back (fifteen minutes), wait twenty minutes for another bus, take a fifteen minute bus ride to the local Future Shop, set off the alarm on the way in and lose ten minutes with dumb people trying to demagnetize my jacket, find that they've sold out, walk over to the nearest Best Buy (ten minutes, three near-fatalities because people cannot drive), grab the last copy, stand there for five minutes as some douche berates me for daring to take the last copy because it was clearly HIS, stand in line for twenty minutes, pay for it, get outside, miss my bus, stand there for forty five minutes before finding out I missed the last one, walk to a nearby bus stop to catch a different one (ten minutes), miss it again, scream in fury and walk home (two and a half hours).
And it started raining half way there.
Which method was better again?
I agree, if origin didn't spend so much time trying to talk itself up and actually gave me a reason to use origin maybe I would use it.Porygon-2000 said:Maybe so, but steam offers me at present the better service of the two, so I will stick with that.
If Origin can prove it can be better than Steam, and not trying to constantly excuse itself, then I may think of switching.,
The thing is, the existence of one detracts from the existence of the other. I have loyalty to steam purely because I have built a library on steam. The existance of Origin however forces me to use at least two libraries and have two pieces of software installed- which do the exact same thing- if I want to play all the games I desire. This is inconvenient and when convenience is the only thing that matters to customers of an entirely entertainment based medium, it affects peoples attitudes.Aeonknight said:Since when did you speak for all of them? Valve fanboys hate EA sure, but personally I don't have a problem with either company. Nor am I silly enough to pledge undying loyalty to one digital distribution service over another when it's perfectly acceptable to use both. They are not mutually exclusive of one another.
This whole arguement is worse than the silly console wars.
Maybe cars are very expensive where he lives? For me, Car Insurance alone would cost me a tremendously substantial portion of my wage that would all but prevent me from actually buying any games and given that the biggest game retailers here (Game and Gamestation) are now gone digital distribution is left as one of my only options. Sure, there's Amazon, but it takes longer for it to be delivered than it does for me to download games. Often costs more, too.bandman232 said:How about you get a car then?
I'm sorry I couldn't hear you over the sound of the very vocal group of people who hate EA and feel driven to post nasty things about them on every story the Escapist publishes about them. Oh whats that? You think I was doing something besides taking a cheap jab at this unrelentingly annoying group? Nope. I don't have a problem with Origin or EA. It does occur to me though that the abundance of news stories published here that portray EA in a negative light and the fact that few people I've seen here express positive feelings towards them (there are neutral guys but many positive guys) probably means that there not the most loved company around and need more PR work.Aeonknight said:Since when did you speak for all of them? Valve fanboys hate EA sure, but personally I don't have a problem with either company. Nor am I silly enough to pledge undying loyalty to one digital distribution service over another when it's perfectly acceptable to use both. They are not mutually exclusive of one another.Twilight_guy said:I'm sorry EA but you're going to have to face it sometime... hardcore gamers hate you. They hate you with the irrational mindless rage usually reserve for Star Wars prequels. The nerd rage is beyond measure and they will never like you, ever. Cut your loses and stop trying to make them happy.
This whole arguement is worse than the silly console wars.
Because counting insurance, gas and my general hatred and distrust of people in cars, combined with my lack of wanting to go places, it's easier/safer/cheaper for me to take the bus and use Steam.bandman232 said:How about you get a car then?lacktheknack said:Because it's faster and easier.bandman232 said:I must be the only person on Earth that hates Steam. The way I see it, why waste 3 hours downloading a game when you can get it off a disc, install it, and then play it with in the next 5 minutes?
Let's say I'm trying to buy Skyrim. This is a recount of a real experience.
I have to get on a bus, wait for twenty minutes, get on a train, wait for ten more minutes, then I have to wend my way through a mall's bus depot (five minutes), get into the mall itself, strongarm my way through the crowds to the local EBGames (ten minutes), find it's not even there (seriously, EBGames sucks), get back to the train (fifteen minutes), wait because the train is delayed and then ride it back (fifteen minutes), wait twenty minutes for another bus, take a fifteen minute bus ride to the local Future Shop, set off the alarm on the way in and lose ten minutes with dumb people trying to demagnetize my jacket, find that they've sold out, walk over to the nearest Best Buy (ten minutes, three near-fatalities because people cannot drive), grab the last copy, stand there for five minutes as some douche berates me for daring to take the last copy because it was clearly HIS, stand in line for twenty minutes, pay for it, get outside, miss my bus, stand there for forty five minutes before finding out I missed the last one, walk to a nearby bus stop to catch a different one (ten minutes), miss it again, scream in fury and walk home (two and a half hours).
And it started raining half way there.
Which method was better again?
...Is anyone else seeing envisioning a disapproving older gentleman saying, "We think it's a buncha noise, but those crazy teenagers, they sure seems to love the rock-and-roll?""The hardcore sometimes has issues with Origin, but they seem to love these crowd-funded games," says David DeMartini, chief of Origin at EA. "It was one of the few things we have done that wasn't controversial and nobody had anything negative to say."
THIS!RvLeshrac said:The difference is that Steam was the first serious digital distribution network. They made plenty of mistakes.
Origin has the benefit of a decade of Steam's mistakes, yet they continue to make *EXACTLY THE SAME ONES*. They're even managing to make the mistakes that Steam managed to not only avoid, but explicitly called out so that other distribution networks would be able to benefit from those experiences.
That's the problem people have with Origin: This is the year 2012, and they've produced a service that isn't even as good as Steam was *when it launched*.
Yes.Twilight_guy said:...probably means that there not the most loved company around and need more PR work.
Saying steam is worse now is literally objectively untrue.Sgt. Sykes said:You know, they're basically right.
When Steam launched, it was shit. And people complained. A LOT.
Now Steam is the same shit or worse, people just got used to it. For some reason.
I for one won't buy any game that requires Steam, Origin, UBI-something, Rockstar Club or any other of this crap.