Sub for any gaming related content!
Rules:
- 1: No spam or advertising. This basically means no linking to your own content on blogs, YouTube, Twitch, etc.
- 2: No bigotry or gatekeeping. This should be obvious, but neither of those things will be tolerated. This goes for linked content too; if the site has some heavy “anti-woke” energy, you probably shouldn’t be posting it here.
- 3: No untagged game spoilers. If the game was recently released or not released at all yet, use the Spoiler tag (the little ⚠️ button) in the body text, and avoid typing spoilers in the title. It should also be avoided to openly talk about major story spoilers, even in old games.
- 1 user online
- 7 users / day
- 86 users / week
- 235 users / month
- 1.43K users / 6 months
- 1 subscriber
- 1.36K Posts
- 14.6K Comments
- Modlog
It’s not the point of the article but from day one Netflix streaming never had close to everything I wanted. They just had enough that there was usually something I could settle for after I didn’t find what I was really trying to watch.
Corporate control rises, and piracy to meet it.
Good luck enforcing non-ownership on people who post classified government docs to prove their digital war vehicles are accurate or not. It may overlap, but this is not the same audience.
One benefit of a medium like games, as opposed to movies, is that the method of delivery can be accomplished more independently. Anyone watching a movie, be it a new Disney release or a Sundance film, will probably want it on their TV, where they have limited walled-garden devices. Give them an MP4 file to download, and they might not even know how to quickly use it.
But some famous games like Factorio and Minecraft were first sold with independent download systems, because the game will at some point involve its own executable file; it doesn’t have to fit in some larger play framework. Launchers like Heroic let people set up their own system for downloading games from places less popular than Steam.
So, to conclude the tangent: Suppose in the future, Xbox has tripled its Game Pass offerings and other publishers have followed suit. Other indie developers spotting out the subscription frustration can still release their own games breaking from the formula. This isn’t a remedy for the major AAA games we’d like to preserve, but it does mean the worst case scenario isn’t as bad for games as it is for movies.
The method of delivery for movies can be accomplished more independently too, if the movie studios hadn’t formed enormous cartels.
Sure, the medium helps, but this was mostly because the creators went out of their way to take a stand against digital distribution platforms, including Gamers’ favorite corporate overlord : Steam (and in this process, got 30% more money on literal millions of sales. Okay, maybe more like 25% if you factor in the costs of doing this themselves). Minecraft even used to have a paragraph dedicated specifically to the decision of not distributing through Steam on their official website.
But try to criticize Steam in any way on basically any “gaming” forum and you’ll get crucified
Legislation needs to be enacted that actually does something about this capitalist bullshit.
The capitalist bullshit is the point