• artyom@piefed.social
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    5 months ago

    “Steam is winning with its ease of use,” he says. “In that regard, I think much can be done in GOG without losing its core values and the way it operates in general.”

    Yeah, not really. Ease of use is part of it but I would argue GoG is equally easy. Steam also has a breadth of features for users.

    More importantly, as it pertains to GoG, Steam allows DRM.

    This is a fundamental problem for GoG. Publishers want DRM. Consumers largely don’t care. For that reason, Steam has a much larger library, especially for big AAA titles. Every game that’s on GoG is also on Steam. They’ll always be the little guy catering to a niche market of consumers who demand DRM-free games. Get rid of that and we can start talking about ease of use and features.

    Obviously, that’s not what I want, but if they want to compete with Steam, it’s what they’ll have to do.

    • Kjell@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      You’re right that the AAA will be published on Steam first. And since people want to have all the games in one store, they will buy indie/AA/old games on Steam instead of Gog even if those titles exists on Gog.

      But I still think it is better for Gog to stick with the DRM-free niche, people will not move away from Steam anyway as we have seen with Epic store.