this post was submitted on 18 Nov 2023
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Exactly, they're offering useful services for monetary compensation. How dare they?
Not services, they are offerning their status. That's different.
You don't go to Valve and get services any more than you do from Sony, Nintendo or Microsoft. Valve isn't looking for content, though. They have all the content. The entire firehose.
To be clear, I'm not saying Valve is worse. But it's at best about the same, and arguably harder to work with on anything but getting out of your way to let you publish. The one thing I begrudge them is taking the social media model of making others work for you for free into game publishing, which I do think is a bit iffy. Maybe I'm just old fashioned there.
You are fundamentally misunderstanding what services they offer.
For starters, the infrastructure. Publishing a game, or any online content, is a massive undertaking. You need a robust solution for both storage and delivery. It needs to be scalable with the number of downloads, able to handle the bandwidth of parallel downloads, and resilient to hardware failure. You need a CDN to overcome geographic obstacles. You need a solution to orchestrate the distribution of software updates. In current year, most of these issues are solved by various platforms and the process is extremely streamlined. You upload a video to Youtube and soon enough a person in Timbuktu can watch it in full HD. Steam's infrastructure does the same thing for games. Storage, distribution, updates, and lots of smaller online services that make up a robust gaming platform.
Steam is a fairly competent storefront. I'm not a game developer, I can't speak for the full experience, but at the very least, Steam implements discoverability, payment processing, and license management. All things that a fully independent developer would have to implement or pay to have someone else do it.
Finally, you can't just equate Steam's large audience with their status. Community features, the almighty algorithm, discoverability (again) and recommendations are all features that would not exist without Steam.
If you can't see how all of those are valuable services to game developers, you're beyond reason.
No, yeah, Steam's business model is very comparable to Youtube's. That's my exact point. I've made that specific comparison elsewhere here. I don't know how long you've been around the "Fediverse", but when you're not actively defending a corporation you like way more than a human should like a corporation that's not typically considered a defense around these parts.
But hey, yeah, that's a good mental model for it.
Look, I'm aware of the work Steam and other gaming first parties do. Like, very aware. Way more aware than most. You're Internetsplaining the crap out of this to me right now. And I'm telling you Steam has been actively cutting down the amount of those things they do based on their quasi-monopolistic positioning. Their entire business model and concept is to create a platform that runs itself (or is crowdsourced to its audience and creators as much as possible). That goes all the way down to content creation, discoverability, curation and more. Their idea is to do game-publishing-as-social-media.
I have very mixed feelings about that, but I don't think it's fundamentally invalid. They've staved off enshittification so far because they have SO much money and they're a private company, so they aren't mandated to drive endless growth out of that model.
The observation I'm making is that Steam hangs in the same space, ideology and business practices as Amazon or Youtube, but they absolutely don't get the same crap for it as Amazon and Youtube. Which demonstrates a somewhat horrifying fact: It's not the existence of the billionaires like Musk, the monopolistic behavior like Amazon or the black-box gig economy algorithm that pisses people off. It's just the enshittifiation of the end product. If the incentive system in publicly traded companies wasn't so terrible at doing its job people would just live in the shadow of Google and Amazon and Twitter for the rest of their lives and actively love it.
I mean, I guess in a way it's comforting, in that it's proof positive that the liberal assumptions about the market self-regulating optimally are absolutely wrong, but it's still kinda disappointing to see the true power of branding.