The Steam of today and the Steam that existed ten years ago are two very different services. In its early years it was always online drm with an offline mode that if you were lucky worked ten percent of the time. If you lost connection you normally ended up getting logged out and couldnt play your games.Little Gray said:I take it you are talking about Steam? It has an offline mode, which I find very useful when playing on my laptop in places where an internet connection isn't available. Also, if you lose your connection while playing on Steam's online mode, you can keep on playing all of your games as long as you don't exit Steam. In always-online games, even a temporary connection failure will cause the game to quit, and no offline play is available.Doom972 said:Well actually Valve was.
Regardless of what they are now they made massive breakthroughs in getting people to accept some really shitty drm. They helped prove that people are willing to take it up the ass to be able to play the games they want.[/quote]
Normally, I would disagree... But in this case I think back to the first Steam game I bought, Half-Life 2 on disk, and I couldn't play until I had a stable internet connection. Which, back then, I didn't have. It was the first time ever I bought a game on a disk I couldn't play without the internet. So guess what, upgraded my internet and was able to play it, whooo. Oh the poor me that lived in the dark ages without the internet until I had to in order to play a game I liked that I could only play at lan centers at the time. Don't mistake me, I love Valve now, but I can see the fact they kinda forced the online thing first. (plus if valve went under and couldn't support steam I'd be out a lot of money) So long live Valve! Looking at it positively thanks for getting me on the internet?