1 year (coming back to Steam on February 15, 2020)Lol, people gotta have that game on Steam. They should have increased the price to 99€ on Steam to profit.
Is this timed exclusive?
1 yearLol, people gotta have that game on Steam. They should have increased the price to 99€ on Steam to profit.
Is this timed exclusive?
I would be interested in playing Hades - Battle Out of Hell though.I'm glad that this hasn't affected any game I actually wanted so far, but it will only be a matter of time. I swear, if Epic gets Digimon I'll riot. By aggressively not buying the game while being devastated.
That's 0 years1 year (coming back to Steam on February 15, 2019)
I'm still sad I can't just skip the sportsball part of Pyre. It's been ages since I played, maybe there's a good trainer or something for it now. I want to finish the story but I hate the actual Pyre game so much. Despite that I would have pre-ordered Hades day 1 if they hadn't gone anti-consumer out the gate.Why do people use Pyre not setting the sales charts on fire as justification for Supergiant signing an exclusivity deal? Why is it the fault of the "cRowdED MaRKEtPlace" and not the fact that they made a weird-ass, narrative-heavy, 3v3 fantasy-themed NBA Jam?
I remember I got Nioh once with it. Now that I think about it your work could help devs write really useful descriptions.If I go for a different model, for which the sequence of words does not matter, I get games with samurais.
Even more wonderful is that Capcom seemed like the last one to be willing to doing it.you know it!
i wish publishers would give up on using that pile of crap already ... it's not like it's doing anything any more ... especially lately
Its for the board and investors, denuvo is the easiest way to keep them happy.yeah, it's interesting that pubs still pay for DRM that does nothing else only annoys people buying games. They can't be not aware, can they?
Hahahaha, I'm still in 2018Fuck all that noise, I'm not buying Exodus at all
That's 0 years
welcomehi friends
Yeah, having a VN sport hybrid game will obviously turn some people away. I guess that's why Hades is the way it is so they don't lose sales.Why do people use Pyre not setting the sales charts on fire as justification for Supergiant signing an exclusivity deal? Why is it the fault of the "cRowdED MaRKEtPlace" and not the fact that they made a weird-ass, narrative-heavy, 3v3 fantasy-themed NBA Jam?
Ok. I disagree with this take but I think your post is shitty and the topic has more nuance than that.Koktaku is a website for schmucks to write on.
give them a few more months and it will actually come trueSteam OT for february- Nothing new is coming thanks to Epic so you can finally work on your backlog.
I'm sorry, I don't really follow this. What's wrong with Valve's message?Ok. I disagree with this take but I think your post is shitty and the topic has more nuance than that.
Kotaku's stance on social and political issues aside (since this is about Steam, right?) Valve's statement here is pretty shit. They basically said something to which everyone agrees in the most passive aggressive way possible. AND in a way which leaves themselves blameless and heaps all the blame on the publisher/developer.
Without access to internal communications we can't tell if Valve is bullshitting here (they might or might not be), and obviously their stance is pro-consumer, since most consumers like Steam's platform better than Epic's. So we are left with a very terse statement sent in a very public way to people who are very likely already angry. The second tweet is completely right. It's a frequent complaint of developers on Steam (and actually a lot of video game developers), so why not address it right off the bat? Additionally the article on Kotaku doesn't mention that at all, similarly the same author followed up with more tweets on the subject that add nuance:
So it looks like you're picking the most click-bait-y part of the discussion and ignoring the actual issues. That's bad form and I hoped we were better than that here.
Valve should know by now that Steam users frequently game its systems (look at all their sales games, review systems, bombing, etc) and if there is a way for an audience direct their anger in a public way some of them will do it. It makes easy PR sense to address that shit right up front. Valve's statement could have easily had 1 more sentence about "our platform allows refunds" or whatever so people can actually vote with their wallets in a way the publishers will feel, but instead it just ends and gives no recourse to people who are stuck in that situation.
They even claim that "no worries I'm sure the patches and DLC will all come out at the same time!" LOL. Ask anyone who bought a non-CDPR game on GOG recently how that goes. Patches are late or never show up frequently. I can't take Valve's word at that, they aren't in control of it, the publisher is. Its all designed to keep Valve blameless and point the anger somewhere else instead of diffusing the situation. It's a choice. They could have made a different statement. Instead they chose to send this one and they can be criticized for what they chose to say. Even when their statement is mostly right.
This just says that the game will still be available for people who preordered, and that they think this decision is unfair for Steam customers who expected the game to be available on sale on Steam for more time (since they now only had a few hours to buy it before it was delisted until Feb 2020). What's wrong with that?Later today, sales of Metro Exodus will be discontinued on Steam due to a publisher decision to make the game exclusive to another PC store.
The developer and publisher have assured us that all prior sales of the game on Steam will be fulfilled on Steam, and Steam owners will be able to access the game and any future updates or DLC through Steam.
We think the decision to remove the game is unfair to Steam customers, especially after a long pre-sale period. We apologize to Steam customers that were expecting it to be available for sale through the February 15th release date, but we were only recently informed of the decision and given limited time to let everyone know.
Nothing shitty in my eyes about calling calling Grayson a schmuck for complaining about "a hyper-toxic "pro-consumer" user base" and his usual (ironically) rabble-rousing nonsense.Ok. I disagree with this take but I think your post is shitty and the topic has more nuance than that.
I am literally 100% on board for Valve being more vindictive at this point, even if it includes some juvenile passive-aggressivity. Sergey and Sweeney get to go around completely shitting up the discourse, but Valve is expected to act like the gentleman in the room?Kotaku's stance on social and political issues aside (since this is about Steam, right?) Valve's statement here is pretty shit. They basically said something to which everyone agrees in the most passive aggressive way possible. AND in a way which leaves themselves blameless and heaps all the blame on the publisher/developer.
What could Valve possibly be at fault for here?AND in a way which leaves themselves blameless and heaps all the blame on the publisher/developer.
Considering that just a few days ago the official Metro Twitter was talking about Steam keys:Without access to internal communications we can't tell if Valve is bullshitting here (they might or might not be), and obviously their stance is pro-consumer, since most consumers like Steam's platform better than Epic's.
I'n not advocating GAMERS RISE UP here, but I don't see anything wrong with Valve sending out a statement that condemns anti-consumer behavior in no uncertain terms.So we are left with a very terse statement sent in a very public way to people who are very likely already angry.
What's right about it? They shouldn't condemn anti-consumer behavior because some dumb nutsos are going to go harass Sergey on Twitter?The second tweet is completely right. It's a frequent complaint of developers on Steam (and actually a lot of video game developers), so why not address it right off the bat?
The article is actually relatively okay since it's mostly only a report on what Valve said. I'm taking issue not so much with the actual article, but the unnecessary and idiotic editorializing around it.Additionally the article on Kotaku doesn't mention that at all, similarly the same author followed up with more tweets on the subject that add nuance:
And these tweets are dumb as rocks too. The only people that really drone on about MUH COMPETITION constantly are all the people banging the "VoLVo BaD, EpIC GooD GUyS" drum.
lolSo it looks like you're picking the most click-bait-y part of the discussion and ignoring the actual issues. That's bad form and I hoped we were better than that here.
Why would they need to include this? We all know that we'll be able to get a refund, that's not really the issue that Valve was raising with their statement.Valve should know by now that Steam users frequently game its systems (look at all their sales games, review systems, bombing, etc) and if there is a way for an audience direct their anger in a public way some of them will do it. It makes easy PR sense to address that shit right up front. Valve's statement could have easily had 1 more sentence about "our platform allows refunds" or whatever so people can actually vote with their wallets in a way the publishers will feel, but instead it just ends and gives no recourse to people who are stuck in that situation.
Ironically, since you're whining on about Valve throwing people to the wolves, they actually threw Deep Silver and 4A to the wolves here and tried to completely exonerate themselves from blame. It's not "their word" that they're conveying:They even claim that "no worries I'm sure the patches and DLC will all come out at the same time!" LOL. Ask anyone who bought a non-CDPR game on GOG recently how that goes. Patches are late or never show up frequently. I can't take Valve's word at that, they aren't in control of it, the publisher is. Its all designed to keep Valve blameless and point the anger somewhere else instead of diffusing the situation. It's a choice. They could have made a different statement. Instead they chose to send this one and they can be criticized for what they chose to say. Even when their statement is mostly right.
Now if the game isn't updated, they've preemptively cleared themselves of blame and can easily say "Deep Silver and 4A told us otherwise" if/when they don't actually update the game properly.The developer and publisher have assured us that all prior sales of the game on Steam will be fulfilled on Steam, and Steam owners will be able to access the game and any future updates or DLC through Steam.
The part where Valve ignores the giant elephant in the room that is people are going to be rightly pissed off at this anti-consumer move. Instead of directing them to places to show their displeasure constructively (refunds, IMO) or making some sort of mea culpa, they just leave it all at the publisher's feet so that it becomes their problem. Which is exactly the behavoir that many publishers are citing in their moves to Epic. It's playing into Epic's hands here.I'm sorry, I don't really follow this. What's wrong with Valve's message?
This just says that the game will still be available for people who preordered, and that they think this decision is unfair for Steam customers who expected the game to be available on sale on Steam for more time (since they now only had a few hours to buy it before it was delisted until Feb 2020). What's wrong with that?
It literally is the problem of the publisher.The part where Valve ignores the giant elephant in the room that is people are going to be rightly pissed off at this anti-consumer move. Instead of directing them to places to show their displeasure constructively (refunds, IMO) or making some sort of mea culpa, they just leave it all at the publisher's feet so that it becomes their problem. Which is exactly the behavoir that many publishers are citing in their moves to Epic. It's playing into Epic's hands here.
I don't see how this is Valve's fault. Also, I bet if they told people to refund their game, then we'd get articles saying "Vindictive Valve tells customers to refund game because it's now an Epic exclusive". And about leaving it at the publisher's feet, why is that bad? Who decided to cut a deal with Epic and remove the game from Steam after months of preorders? the publisher. Why shouldn't the publisher deal with that? I don't understand why Valve should be doing any mea culpa here if it's not their fault that Deep Silver took a bag of cash from Epic.The part where Valve ignores the giant elephant in the room that is people are going to be rightly pissed off at this anti-consumer move. Instead of directing them to places to show their displeasure constructively (refunds, IMO) or making some sort of mea culpa, they just leave it all at the publisher's feet so that it becomes their problem. Which is exactly the behavoir that many publishers are citing in their moves to Epic. It's playing into Epic's hands here.
well Deep Silver did leave it all at volvo's feet tbh .... they've been taking pre-orders for months now ... and only spring this stuff right before releaseThe part where Valve ignores the giant elephant in the room that is people are going to be rightly pissed off at this anti-consumer move. Instead of directing them to places to show their displeasure constructively (refunds, IMO) or making some sort of mea culpa, they just leave it all at the publisher's feet so that it becomes their problem. Which is exactly the behavoir that many publishers are citing in their moves to Epic. It's playing into Epic's hands here.
this is EXACTLY what would've happened ...Also, I bet if they told people to refund their game, then we'd get articles saying "Vindictive Valve tells customers to refund game because it's now an Epic exclusive".
Yeah, I'm really not seeing the issue here.well Deep Silver did leave it all at volvo's feet tbh .... they've been taking pre-orders for months now ... and only spring this stuff right before release
What kind of bullshit thinking is this? What Mea Culpa should Steam do? What Mea Culpa should Valve do? What is their wrongdoing? Getting told last minute the game is going to be sold exclusively at the Epic Store?The part where Valve ignores the giant elephant in the room that is people are going to be rightly pissed off at this anti-consumer move. Instead of directing them to places to show their displeasure constructively (refunds, IMO) or making some sort of mea culpa, they just leave it all at the publisher's feet so that it becomes their problem. Which is exactly the behavoir that many publishers are citing in their moves to Epic. It's playing into Epic's hands here.
Not to mention they essentially left it up to Valve to LEAVE A WARNING on the still-existing pre-order page. This is 100% on Deep Silver and Valve basically let them off with a near-objective statementWhat kind of bullshit thinking is this? What Mea Culpa should Steam do? What Mea Culpa should Valve do? What is their wrongdoing? Getting told last minute the game is going to be sold exclusively at the Epic Store?
This is a publisher's problem, not a store problem. The publisher decided to, at the last minute, make the game they have been taking preorders for on Steam, an Epic Store exclusive. This is unfair to the customer base. Any person trying to twist those words is an imbecile, just like Grayson and Walker showed in that twitter thread.
no, of course not ... no one does ... EVER!So, Deep Silver deserves death threats and hate mail over their shitty business moves?
that's the thing, though .... they did this and there are already articles misrepresenting what they wrote ... if they didn't say anything at all - people would be complaining they don't care (and/or aren't willing to do anything about publishers leaving) ... if they reminded people about refunds in that notice - you'd see articles about "vindictive volvo" encouraging people to hurt developers by refunding their pre-orders ... etc. etc. etc. ... there is literally NOTHING volvo can do (or not do) that would get them any positive sentiment among lots of devs, publishers, and the press right nowValve has just shown everyone on the fence that the people who jumped ship were right by doing the most Valve thing possible.
I feel like this really needs to be emphasized.let's face it - their "we don't talk to anyone" approach throughout the years only enabled people like Tim or Sergey to go around spreading bullshit about volvo on twitter and during dev talks ... and since volvo wasn't commenting on anything, some people just automatically assumed it must be true (even if it wasn't)
awwwwww, thank you!!!Well you wrote please so i cannot deny your request good sir
Ill have it posted later tpday on here
It's up now~awwwwww, thank you!!!
very, very, VERY short-lived ...It's been a while since I've had to argue for a noble PC gaming cause. I kinda missed it to be honest, although I expect that sentiment to be short lived.
I've been tempted to grab Biomutant off GOG tbh. If they announce some kind of steamworkshop integration I may grab it off steam tho.very, very, VERY short-lived ...
Post automatically merged:
Last month:
i don't think there's any meaningful customization in that game ... other than the character, i meanI've been tempted to grab Biomutant off GOG tbh. If they announce some kind of steamworkshop integration I may grab it off steam tho.
well, to be fair - they did say "at this stage" even last monthYeah, excuse my language, but fuck them.
And, I say that as a long time supporter of this publisher, and someone who probably owns more games and DLCs from THQ Nordic than anyone else in here.
Deep Silver doesn't deserve death threats but certainly deserves complaints directed their way for the business decision they made.So, Deep Silver deserves death threats and hate mail over their shitty business moves? Fuck that, no one deserves that stuff for any reason.
I'm not sure how a store putting a warning notice on top of a preorder button that the preorder is being taken down soon because an exclusive deal has been signed (at the last minute) and they think that such a move is unfair to their customers (which it is, since the game is being taken down before release while the preorder campaign has been running for a while and customers wont be able to purchase it for a year) but nothing they can do about it is telling fence sitters the people who jumped ship did the right thing.You want the companies to be *MORE* aggressive? Get excited for more exclusivity deals and bad marketing tactics then. That's what you're endorsing here. This stuff isn't a free market as much as Valve wishes it was. Epic is money-hatting developers who are upset at Steam rightly or wrongly. Valve has just shown everyone on the fence that the people who jumped ship were right by doing the most Valve thing possible.
Acting like this is a call to arms from Valve to people to harass and send death threats is disingenuous at best in my opinion.We think the decision to remove the game is unfair to Steam customers, especially after a long pre-sale period. We apologize to Steam customers that were expecting it to be available for sale through the February 15th release date, but we were only recently informed of the decision and given limited time to let everyone know.
Companies aren't your friends, I appreciate a lot of what THQ is doing, so it's important to take in their good along with any of their bad.i don't think there's any meaningful customization in that game ... other than the character, i mean
don't think that's really workshop-worthy (from their perspective)
Post automatically merged:
well, to be fair - they did say "at this stage" even last month
yes, absolutely ... no corporation is your friend ... not THQ ... not Epic ... not even VolvoCompanies aren't your friends, I appreciate a lot of what THQ is doing, so it's important to take in their good along with any of their bad.