I'd like to remind everyone that this company made it against the customer service agreement to sue them, on penalty of having your account banned. Did even Origin stoop that low? (Granted, they
will ban you for complaining about them on the Internet, on a site they're not affiliated with, under an account no one can prove is you... but maybe not for suing them.) When a company that does that says they realize they have a customer service issue, do you
really trust them to do anything about it?
Steven Bogos said:
The "does not respond at all" phrase rings particularly true for most people I know, (including myself), who have had their complaints fall on deaf ears whenever there's a problem with Steam.
Yeah, I've ... never been convinced that Valve even has an actual customer service department, just a bot that's programmed to look at what game you're talking about and respond with pre-written bullshit on par with "Is your computer plugged in?"
It's just lucky for them that I've never had a real problem that didn't get magically fixed within a week or two.
Aeshi said:
They "need to", but they probably won't, unless they manage to pawn the job off on to the community somehow.
I can see it now: "Customer Service: Now with Steam Workshop support! Provide your own fixes for other people (so we don't have to!)"
The irony is that it would be a major improvement; generally, when people take their complaints to the forums and aren't rude about it, they can find a fix for their issues maybe half the time. At least, provided they're having a problem with a game and not Steam itself. So maybe what Valve really needs to do is hire someone to build a database of common issues and likely solutions, kind of like the PC Gaming Wiki, so people who are having problems with games can be directed to that before wasting anyone's time or, worse, assuming the worst right off the bat and just demanding a refund (oh yeah, and they need to allow refunds too, but that's like saying plants need water). That would take care of a lot of the volume, and leave them with basically nothing to do besides fielding complaints with their own games and the Steam client/service itself, most of which are so fundamental that I'm not sure they could be fixed anyway.