- Joined
- Apr 26, 2016
- Messages
- 1,447
- Nebulae
- 6,079
This is quite a hot topic nowadays with Epic's exclusives, so let's try and contain it in here and not flood every other new vidya thread
My own hot take:
Epic is pushing for something really good in gaming, but you can't make an omelette without breaking a few eggs - especially with the iron grip that Valve has had over PC gaming for decades.
My own hot take:
Epic is pushing for something really good in gaming, but you can't make an omelette without breaking a few eggs - especially with the iron grip that Valve has had over PC gaming for decades.
- Timed exclusives are necessary to gain any traction in any store. Any games that do a multi-store release with Steam will just have an overwhelming majority of their sales go through Steam anyway.
- Please note I mean timed exclusives through an agreement with Epic only - games that happen to release on one store and not another because they feel it's the better platform isn't something that Epic (or any platform for that matter) can do anything about, that's the nature of industry competition.
- Trying to "compete fairly with a better platform by having the better store" isn't going to work if all the games are on Steam anyway - feature parity isn't enough, and there aren't that many features that will be a big enough pull to get people away from Steam and onto another platform.
- Ignorance is playing a very large role - people don't understand why some things are done the way they are or what some things mean.
- Epic isn't spying on your Steam friends(???), they're using it for importing existing friends. They don't use the Steam API for this info to retain privacy (yes, the Steam API tracks usage as most do), and to avoid dependency rot.
- Epic is doing as much data collection as Steam is - collecting hardware info, installed programs, basic analytics.
- Epic isn't "ran by the Chinese". I dislike the Chinese government and the way they do things as much the next guy, but Tencent being a shareholder doesn't mean they decide what Epic does with the company or their data.
- If you're scared about Tencent owning a stake in Epic, then I sure hope you don't make use of any of these companies' products that Tencent also has a stake in. Tencent is an investment firm - they make money by going to companies and giving them short-term money (buying stake in the company/lump funding) in return for long-term money (profits from that company's sales).
- They are very reactive to the community - even the loud minority that cause the most issues. This was demonstrated in Fortnite's updates and even through the store itself.
- Their old refund policy was a bit fucked, but they've changed it now since there has been quite a bit of backlash over it. Guess what? It's now identical to Steam's refund policy. That's the whole point of creating competition - it drives improvements.
- They've updated their Steam account linking process to no longer read and cache your friend data. It wasn't being sent anywhere without you hitting the import button, but they decided to remove all doubt and change the functionality to avoid doing it in the first place (as they should have).
- The founder, CEO, and majority shareholder of Epic Games, Tim Sweeney, has made it very clear his long-term goal with the Epic Games Store - unifying game purchases and pushing for open standards
- This is further reinforced by the fact that Epic will be allowing sales of games that appear on their store, including exclusives to the Humble Store.
Reactions:
List