I used to tell myself this and gog even used this as marketing with the “French Monk” incident.
But over the years? I don’t see the point. If I am going to replay Stranglehold again but don’t want to wait for a re-release/re-buy it, it is just as easy to pirate it. Since I am going to need the crack to get past the lack of steam (which is totally not drm…) and probably a few patches anyway.
People have been trained to say that because that is how people decided to accept it when other DRM models were horrifically invasive (and didn’t look dissimilar on paper…)
Steam IS digital rights management. You authenticate with Valve, they confirm your account has access to the digitam media (the game), and provide a download if you do. After that, you can do whatever you want with it. That is almost exactly the Stardock “goo” model.
Steam ALSO has an extra layer of drm on top that developers can optionally use that will prevent you from launching the game outside of steam.
You can treat it like buying a CD (the first download) and being able to get another CD anytime for free from the store by verifying your identity and the extra DRM being the online check for the authenticity of the CD?
I used to tell myself this and gog even used this as marketing with the “French Monk” incident.
But over the years? I don’t see the point. If I am going to replay Stranglehold again but don’t want to wait for a re-release/re-buy it, it is just as easy to pirate it. Since I am going to need the crack to get past the lack of steam (which is totally not drm…) and probably a few patches anyway.
AFAIK steam has optional drm. If the devs dont use it you can play the games without steam. I think it says on the store page if it’s drm-free
People have been trained to say that because that is how people decided to accept it when other DRM models were horrifically invasive (and didn’t look dissimilar on paper…)
Steam IS digital rights management. You authenticate with Valve, they confirm your account has access to the digitam media (the game), and provide a download if you do. After that, you can do whatever you want with it. That is almost exactly the Stardock “goo” model.
Steam ALSO has an extra layer of drm on top that developers can optionally use that will prevent you from launching the game outside of steam.
You can treat it like buying a CD (the first download) and being able to get another CD anytime for free from the store by verifying your identity and the extra DRM being the online check for the authenticity of the CD?