Just vacuum them with the box. Problem solved.
Chailles
I haven't played much of it, but what I can say about why I bought the game: Big space ships with interiors (most space sims really just give you a cockpit view) and the game looked cool. I paid $60 for it years ago and hop in it every now and again. You hear all about the monetization aspect of it and it's not really been a problem for me since it doesn't impact me in any way.
The writing is a little hammy, but they have to rush it bc it’s really a minor bit of the game. (Spoiler, it’s very pro-labor and anti-capitalist, so if that triggers you, don’t play it.)
Which annoyingly, is the reason I bounced off the game. Breaking down ships is fun. That's literally the whole reason I want to play the game. The story wants me to hate playing the game and won't let me play until I listen to the entirety of why capitalism is bad.
This may have just been local to the Total War Warhammer subreddit, but they weren't particularly fond of it blaming Hyenas for the lack of TWWH3 stuff.
Stardew Valley may have not implemented any DRM to check for ownership.
I can't really comment on the exact state of the games compared to how they were prior as I never played either of them. While the overall actions were the same, from what I've heard, the final state of each game is completely different.
From my understanding, Blizzard promised things and didn't failed to meet those promises leaving a worse product than what was there. Valve didn't do that, presumably.
Edit: I should also point out that wouldn't you have to consider it anti-consumer for a game to do a total overhaul of itself? That prior version will no longer be available? Same with really any update whatsoever. At what point is it no longer the same game? If Valve instead released this updates over the course of a year, is it still the same game then?
Perhaps Blizzard is generally under more scrutiny than Valve. Not to mention, isn't it still possible to just download an older steam depot and archive that? Sure, it not being readily available via Steam's basic library makes it difficult to archive, but releasing this as a new game entirely may have caused more issues than it would have this way.
I'll be honest. I do miss Reddit. I often think about going back to it. Reading this though, it reinvigorates my belief, I made the right choice and I'm never going back.
And as someone who couldn't even land on the Mun without crashing, I downloaded that mod and unsurprisingly found things even harder since it disables the standard maneuvers.
I've been told there's been an update for the back button since like a day after the new UI was released. Doesn't matter whether in Beta or Stable, it's still broken for me such that I get sent back to the library.
It wasn't really even exclusives technically. It was explicitly Excluding-Steam exclusives. It released everywhere else but not on Steam. And it was further aggravated by games that were already on Steam being taken off in favor of launching elsewhere.
Yeah, but you don't need to tell me that in an unskippable cutscene (the fact that it's unskippable is the part I have an issue with) and ironically, the gameplay is so compelling that I absolutely do not mind just wasting my life away toiling under these ridiculous work conditions.
Edit: Let's be real here, the game didn't need a story. Just set me up with a ridiculous amount of debt and let me just break down ship after ship. They could have just added more ships and systems than make a story that people actively would work against.