<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?><oembed><version><![CDATA[1.0]]></version><provider_name><![CDATA[Malstrom's Articles News]]></provider_name><provider_url><![CDATA[https://seanmalstrom.wordpress.com]]></provider_url><author_name><![CDATA[seanmalstrom]]></author_name><author_url><![CDATA[https://seanmalstrom.wordpress.com/author/seanmalstrom/]]></author_url><title><![CDATA[Email: A Platform Company&nbsp;Indeed]]></title><type><![CDATA[link]]></type><html><![CDATA[<p><em><a href="http://www.theverge.com/gaming/2012/8/8/3228247/valve-to-sell-non-gaming-software-on-steam-starting-september-5th" target="_blank">http://www.theverge.com/gaming/2012/8/8/3228247/valve-to-sell-non-gaming-software-on-steam-starting-september-5th</a></em></p>
<p><em>You&#8217;re right. Steam is constantly receiving updates and Team Fortress</em><br />
<em>2 is all about hats and other crap that people can make off of the</em><br />
<em>game. DOTA 2 is similar and I&#8217;ll be surprised if the upcoming</em><br />
<em>Counter-Strike isn&#8217;t leveraged as a platform in some way. 1.6 was used</em><br />
<em>to help develop Steam and CS:Source was used to show off the source</em><br />
<em>engine. They tried to use Portal to help boost sales of the Razer</em><br />
<em>Hydra controller. Half-Life 2 Episode 3 and Half-Life 3 may only be</em><br />
<em>the carrot on a stick to keep people hoping for more.</em></p>
<p><em>Honestly, they may be turning into a platform house but it&#8217;s a bit</em><br />
<em>difficult to feel bitter about it. It offers an integrated gaming</em><br />
<em>environment (Steam via the friends list, auto-updates, library and</em><br />
<em>saves management, etc) and the company does cater to the community and</em><br />
<em>developers quite a bit. Their intentions may be to leverage them for</em><br />
<em>money but they aren&#8217;t being evil (or at least &#8216;as evil as others&#8217;).</em><br />
<em>You can mod many of their games. If I have to deal with drm then a</em><br />
<em>simple product key would be best but Steam&#8217;s method would be the next</em><br />
<em>best thing (besides no drm). Like you said, PC gaming thrived before</em><br />
<em>them and could do so with them gone. I wish that they would be more</em><br />
<em>forthcoming with their intentions. Are they going to eventually roll</em><br />
<em>out a Linux distro and Steam certified devices? Are they ever going to</em><br />
<em>increase the rate at which they develop and release games? The answer</em><br />
<em>to the latter is probably &#8220;no&#8221; since they don&#8217;t want to piss off their</em><br />
<em>partners on an open platform. I&#8217;m pretty sure that EA and others</em><br />
<em>dislike that they give Valve free advertising with their games by</em><br />
<em>bothering with their platform. Hence Origin.</em></p>
<p><em>I&#8217;m lazy, devs, pubs and other people are to an extent lazy too. If we</em><br />
<em>can just go to a single place, get all of our games and software with</em><br />
<em>a decent ui then I will use it. Companies like Capcom will scare a</em><br />
<em>person off from buying PC games. I bought the digital versions of Dark</em><br />
<em>Void Zero and Devil May Cry 4 from them a few years ago. The DMC 4</em><br />
<em>installer constantly failed in downloading the game but it did</em><br />
<em>eventually activate and install successfully. Dark Void Zero wouldn&#8217;t</em><br />
<em>activate which wouldn&#8217;t allow me to install it. I dealt with their</em><br />
<em>customer support many times off and on over the course of 1.5 years. I</em><br />
<em>still have not played or installed Dark Void Zero. I&#8217;ve seen people</em><br />
<em>buy and install DMC 4 from Steam and it was just as frictionless as</em><br />
<em>most of other Steam installs can be. They even got it for less than I</em><br />
<em>paid Capcom. I have to go through hell if I want to install it on</em><br />
<em>another machine. I&#8217;m willing to at least bother with Steam and a few</em><br />
<em>other services but I guess we&#8217;re mostly a sausage fest since</em><br />
<em>disinterested folks will not even bother with PC gaming due to the</em><br />
<em>barriers and shitty experience. I don&#8217;t even like World of Warcraft</em><br />
<em>but I appreciated how easy Blizzard made the entire installation and</em><br />
<em>trial process when I tried it last year. There were no weird issues</em><br />
<em>after an install, nothing else getting messed up on my pc. I&#8217;m a</em><br />
<em>system admin and even I don&#8217;t want to bother with crap when I&#8217;m trying</em><br />
<em>to entertain myself with my pc.</em></p>
<p>At grocery stores, they have these &#8216;self-checkout&#8217; aisles which I loathe. I wondered why I loathed them until it hit me recently. With a normal check-out, you <em>judge the company</em> on their performance of checking out. But in a self-checkout, the company <em>judges you </em>on your performance of checking out.</p>
<p>When a company makes games, they offer their product to you and ask, &#8220;How do you like it?&#8221; But when the company makes platforms or User Generated Content, you get told what the company thinks of your usage (or other people get asked of other customers&#8217; usage).</p>
<p>Imagine the Valve Corporation being a restaurant. Instead of cooking food, it would become a &#8216;platform&#8217; and sell other people&#8217;s food (it would become a grocery store but still try to call itself a restaurant). Then, the Valve Corporation wants to expand in non-food products which, surprise surprise, focuses on products used to make food. So the Valve Corporation starts selling pans and cook books. No matter if people liked or disliked the Valve Corporation doing this, whatever you do, don&#8217;t call it a restaurant anymore.</p>
<p>The Valve Corporation is many things. But it is no longer a game company. It&#8217;s mutated into something more like Best Buy or Gamestop. And instead of seeking profits with <em>used games</em>, it is seeking profits with <em>used gamers</em>.</p>
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