Comment on Has the Deck turned *off* any other Steam users?
Subscript5676@lemmy.ca 4 days agoAgain, you’d be forgiven for that. The design language around these sorts of license purchase has been frequently framed as a straight purchase by many companies on the Internet that it’s become essentially the norm that many don’t question. DRM is also proposed without ever stating that it essentially makes the end user purchase a license, as it frames itself as a way for the publisher to retain some control over the product that’s in their interest, and that the end user don’t even need to really know until the rights are exercised. It’s an infuriating piece of technology that is straight up designed to be a rug pull from the get-go.
But, again, to be fair, not all games on Steam have DRM from some info I’ve gathered before. It was impossible to tell, but I think Steam actually shows a little info box now to clarify that DRM is in place or not.
pory@lemmy.world 1 day ago
Steam notifies for third party DRM, but not for the games that do/don’t use Steamworks DRM. There are games on Steam that are completely DRM free and will launch from the exe file without Steam running at all, but there’s no way to tell if Game X is one of those other than word of mouth.
Subscript5676@lemmy.ca 1 day ago
Oh! That’s somewhat interesting to know.
But it’s worth noting that while word of mouth is one way, we can always just try launching the game without Steam to find out.
pory@lemmy.world 1 day ago
Well, you have to buy the game to try launching it without Steam. Or ask someone who did, of course. It’d be nice to know before buying.
Do note that the default shortcuts Steam uses are Steam dependent - they’re “steam://” addresses that tell Steam to load the game, not shortcuts to the game’s raw executable.