

I’m saying that the LPC can opportunistically change their tune because they occupy the middle space. The Cons and NDP have fairly fixed places on the ideological and political right and left which bind them.


I’m saying that the LPC can opportunistically change their tune because they occupy the middle space. The Cons and NDP have fairly fixed places on the ideological and political right and left which bind them.


I’d chalk this up to the LPC being flexible enough to position itself wherever it needs to be, while the Cons and NDP sit on the poles.


I gave up on the NDP after years of mismanagement. I voted for the party of Jack and was alright with Mulcair. But under Jagmeet the party has been run into the ground.
That year where Jagmeet and the NDP propped up the obviously dead Trudeau government was the final straw. Willfully choosing to support a wildly unpopular prime minister to avoid the election was gross and made a mockery of their name. If you want to be taken seriously as a party and a leader, you have to be in it to win. There could have been an opportunity to become the opposition again and maybe replace the Liberals in time. Instead they chose to sacrifice their own party. If they don’t even want to be a serious party, why the hell should I vote for them?


Valve grew Steam’s market share by locking in exclusives.
By exclusives you mean their own games? Or are you referring to the time before Steam Greenlight?
There were multiple digital distribution platforms in the early days, IGN even had one.
Yeah I remember D2D, it had awful DRM and they deleted my account one day without refunds.
Then Valve forced exclusivity to starve out the competition.
No the competition died because they were trash. I used D2D, Origin, Impulse, they were all horrible compared to Steam.
Steam has its Most-Favored-Nation clause to prevent publishers selling games for cheaper on other platforms.
No, Steam doesn’t let you sell Steam keys to your game on other platforms for cheaper. That’s very different.
Valve fought against refunds for years until the EU told them to wise up.
I refunded things multiple times for the policy changes. As long as you gave a good justification and weren’t abusing the system then they have always been quite reasonable.
Valve only started supporting Linux when needed to sell consoles. They just like most other companies saw Linux gaming as an extreme niche.
No this started because of the Windows Store initiative back in 2012 where Microsoft was trying to consolidate the sale of all software to their proprietary platform. Supporting Linux was Valve’s way of hedging against that future.


Valve doesn’t try and lock in exclusives on their platform like the Epic Store or delete your account with games on it like Origin did. Steam provides plenty of notices about invasive DRM and anti-cheat that other stores don’t. Steam also has an easy refund process that doesn’t require you to call an agent. Valve does a lot to support gaming on Linux while all of the other platforms are almost exclusively Windows only.


Not my point. They aren’t saints, but Steam is still a far better steward for a digital storefront than most.


Steam works because Valve is a private corporation with a leadership who actually like video games.
The skilled people are Citizens and PRs going to work in the US because the same jobs in Canada pay half as much with higher taxes.