You can also start Steam Offline, unless you need a multiplayer game, it won't require to be connected, so its DRM is not as orwellian as most people like to accuse.
Quick notes because your post is full of mistakes/anachronisms:JohnnyDelRay said:1) You don't own the game. You NEED Steam in order to play. Internet/Steam/Ban hammer comes down, you can't play anymore. Not to mention that my account is Australian, so no, the sales don't appeal near as much. GOG still shuns this DRM and ownership model: you pay for it, you download, it's yours.
2) Does anyone else not realize that Steam's DRM is actually WORSE than what XBONE had proposed in a way? So you check in every 24 hours. Right, you're gaming, your internet goes down, bang you have 24 hours to keep playing and hope the outage ends. If you're playing Steam, you're out. But I can switch to offline mode!! WRONG. You need to be online to do that! So all you can do is wait until your router or the internet or whatever is back on. The only thing "offline" mode is good for, is if you are going to travel with a laptop, or moving your desktop to some region (or room) which doesn't have connectivity, or if you can preempt your lack of internet.
Origin is not so bad actually, the myths about it being "spyware" have been completely debunked. It only accesses the files it needs, people saw it accesses the users document file and freaked. Steam does it too, they stash driver and preference profiles and saved games folders and other things in there. People looked for evidence on the way it communicates with its severs.wolfyrik said:Such as Origin are just the spawn of satan and should never be allowed to see the light of day. .
Ah, thanks for clearing up a few of those things. Maybe since I've used Steam for so long I just got used to some of the bad stuff, to the point of even confusing with Origin.Tanakh said:Quick notes because your post is full of mistakes/anachronisms:JohnnyDelRay said:1) You don't own the game. You NEED Steam in order to play. Internet/Steam/Ban hammer comes down, you can't play anymore. Not to mention that my account is Australian, so no, the sales don't appeal near as much. GOG still shuns this DRM and ownership model: you pay for it, you download, it's yours.
2) Does anyone else not realize that Steam's DRM is actually WORSE than what XBONE had proposed in a way? So you check in every 24 hours. Right, you're gaming, your internet goes down, bang you have 24 hours to keep playing and hope the outage ends. If you're playing Steam, you're out. But I can switch to offline mode!! WRONG. You need to be online to do that! So all you can do is wait until your router or the internet or whatever is back on. The only thing "offline" mode is good for, is if you are going to travel with a laptop, or moving your desktop to some region (or room) which doesn't have connectivity, or if you can preempt your lack of internet.
1 ) You also don't own it with GOG, both steam and gog only give you licenses to use the software, I hope you have that clear. When you get the ban on Steam (99% of the times due cheating on MP), you can still play all your games, it just prevents you to connect MP servers that don't allow cheaters. Finally you can have digital backups of your games on DVDs if you want, tough you will still need steam.
2 ) This is totally wrong. If i remember right it used to be somewhat as you said long ago, but it has been years since you can just go offline whenever you freaking want with zero requirements, or at least I can, haven't asked my friends.
As someone who lives in Ireland, I'd like to point out that; good luck finding any games at all. Most game shops have maybe one, possibly two stand or wall sections of games and the majority of those tend to be older, budget titles.LaochEire said:I don't really post on The Escapist, but can I just say that Steam is an absolute rip off when it comes to new games. In fact over in Ireland Gamestop can undercut Steam with a physical retail copy of a PC game by ?20 euro. I never understood the myth about Steam being this bastion of excellence and the main reason to own a PC.
Sure, it has those great sales and they are great, but if I want a game upon release I would have to wait up to a year before it becomes anyway affordable on Steam.
Honestly, with Steam. I really just don't get it. Someone enlighten me, please.
This. Origin is actually very well made and doesn't take as much Memory as Steam. That said, I rarely open it as I have like 2 games on it. I also never see adverts for EA games because of this.J Tyran said:Origin is not so bad actually, the myths about it being "spyware" have been completely debunked. It only accesses the files it needs, people saw it accesses the users document file and freaked. Steam does it too, they stash driver and preference profiles and saved games folders and other things in there. People looked for evidence on the way it communicates with its severs.wolfyrik said:Such as Origin are just the spawn of satan and should never be allowed to see the light of day. .
They found none.
People are spreading myths because of EA hate, EA have even been trying hard with Origin too. 50% sales on games and other special offers, EA still maybe shitty and it leaves a bad taste in my mouth to defend them but they seem to be learning. Dumping online passes and things and slashing prices, the Origin client itself is pretty inoffensive. It does not match Steam in functionality yet but bits and pieces are being added and changes are made all the time.
Take off your EA hate goggles and judge Origin on its own merits.
Not all of those stores. There are other stores, but a lot (not all) of AAA games tend to have some sort of DRM whether it be Origin, UPlay, or Steam. Steamworks DRM (this is different than the Steam Store, but they are somewhat tied together) has become very popular lately as it's free to the publisher (read: optional to the publisher) and happens to be popular among gamers due to goodwill with the company. So not *all* games, but certainly a lot of AAA games do.Ishigami said:I don't know.
Jim says I have free choice on the PC but do I really have it?
Aren't all those stores Jim mentioned not simply selling codes for Steam? - Skyrim will use Steam no matter where you buy the code.
All EA games will use Origin no matter where you get the code from.
Why shouldn't it be possible to buy the code for a XO game from one of these stores as well?
Why is it that we assume that the only source for the code will be the XBox Live Market Place?
As for the ?security? isn't this some sort of false feeling? - Sure Valve and Steam is currently doing well and there is no immediate danger that they go down the gutter but people thought so about THQ as well at some point...
GoG.com is nice but as their title indicates they are specialized in selling old games. Unless you are into playing games around 10 years old there is not much else to see.
That's one of Origins flaws, EA basically wanted a walled garden for EA products. People are not collecting games to the same level as Steam, they might have Mass Effect or Battlefield 3 and the Sims/Sim Shitty and thats about it. It doesn't encourage people to log in unless they want to play one of the few Origin games they have.jmarquiso said:This. Origin is actually very well made and doesn't take as much Memory as Steam. That said, I rarely open it as I have like 2 games on it. I also never see adverts for EA games because of this.J Tyran said:snipped Origin stuff.wolfyrik said:snipped tinfoil hattery
As long as you habilitate Steam offline mode, you can do this. My cousin and I played side-to-side with my own copy of Terraria. He was on the laptop with steam in offline mode, I was on my desktop computer.Andy of Comix Inc said:Oh. Actually, I'm thinking about more sharing between multiple people, not just installing on multiple computers.mike1921 said:Are you sur you can't just use your steam account elsewhere? I know it's added contrivance but you can still install from disk too with steam so you don't need to download it, so I'm pretty sure you can have it on someone else's computer.Andy of Comix Inc said:I'm still mad that retail PC games just come with Steam codes now. I remember being able to install... hell. Even Fallout 3 on multiple people's computers at once, and now everything is bolted to a single account instead. Fair enough, I guess, there's a demand for Steampowered games, but... yeah. I'm still annoyed about that.
With the PS3 you also get required installations.Irridium said:Yeah, that's why I've moved back to playing on the PC. At least I can get the benefits of PC gaming along with the bullshit, where now with consoles it's the bullshit of PC gaming without any of the benefits.canadamus_prime said:Man, do I miss the days when I could just pick up and play on my consoles without all the bullshit.
How I play PS2 games: Put disk in tray, play.
How I play PS3/360 games: Update console, put disk in tray, update game, play.
How I play PC games: Install/download it, update it, faff about to get it to work (not always needed, though), play.
Well, some games do only require one and/or the other (EA games come on Origin, Valve games on Steam, some others like Skyrim employ Steamworks still), however that's not the case for all gamesIshigami said:I don't know.
Jim says I have free choice on the PC but do I really have it?
Aren't all those stores Jim mentioned not simply selling codes for Steam? - Skyrim will use Steam no matter where you buy the code.
All EA games will use Origin no matter where you get the code from.
The best thing about GOG is they don't use a regional pricing scheme anymore.jmarquiso said:That said, both Gog.com and Humblebundle have offered a DRM free storefront for indie developers, so we're seeing a lot of that as well.