The big one I remember is Arma 2. Before DayZ I had never heard of Arma but like everyone I got into that game but I had to buy DayZ to get it. It was cheapest on Bohemia's site which was a couple bucks cheaper then the steam price (not a sale obviously). I plan to try out arma 3 as wellgmaverick019 said:curious, what dev's are you directly buying from? and where are you finding it "cheaper" than the services?Windcaler said:I tend to buy the majority of my games from GoG.com assuming they have what I want. This is one of the major problems with most of the AAA games that come to PC. You can usually only get them on Steam, a service I don't want to use but what can you do? If you want to support the devs behind a great game you have to settle with buying from steam
One thing I started doing about 6 months ago is to go to the developers website to see if I can cut out the middle man and pay the devs directly. Generally I can get the games even cheaper from the devs and I can have the satisfaction that I know it all goes to them instead of a DD service taking a cut and of course the bonus of that is I don't have to deal with steams annoying DRM
i'm not mocking you or anything, i generally would like to know so i can do the same.
(unless you're one of those bloody indie hipster gamers...*shudders* just kidding)
Actually most indie guys have come out and said that they prefer gamers buy their games on Steam, because it boosts them in the charts and the higher their visibility on Steam the vastly higher their sales get. So you may actually not be helping them as much as you think.Windcaler said:Dont Starve is $15 on their site, and $15 on steam. I would rather pay the devs in full then let steam take a cut for the privilege of the game being on steam
See that might be ok if I actually liked steam. I dont. I dont care for it because its just more DRM riddled nonsense that gets in the way of my gaming. Besides if I like a game Ill tell people about it doing my own word of mouth which has more pull with my friends, family, and aquantiences then any ranking chart ever will. I mean think about it, are you more likely to buy a game because you see it high up in the rankings or because a friend (or even stranger) says its awesome?Amir Kondori said:Actually most indie guys have come out and said that they prefer gamers buy their games on Steam, because it boosts them in the charts and the higher their visibility on Steam the vastly higher their sales get. So you may actually not be helping them as much as you think.Windcaler said:Dont Starve is $15 on their site, and $15 on steam. I would rather pay the devs in full then let steam take a cut for the privilege of the game being on steam
I tend not to buy straight from developers not because of that though, but just because it is much easier to manage my games through Steam, and I have my friend's list there, there is Cloud Sync for supported games which is nice because I game on multiple computers, not to mention the fact that you can bring your library anywhere you want on a portable hard drive, which is pretty cool.
Of course if a game is on GOG.com I'll buy it there first because I support no DRM and of course if WWIII happens and the internet goes out I can still play those games. Provided we have power at all and no super mutants are wandering the streets.