I don't cite the exclusives and the bad store and the high prices as much because I think they all fit under much broader concerns.
I would catch all those things with my more general concerns over the spectacular aggression while bringing nothing to the table. I can wait for the games to come on steam and not use their store. I'm not too worried about that. It's just bringing in this, yes, terrible aggression is highly off-putting to me.
Your whole strategy is to put steam users out? I don't like it when companies come in and start irresponsibly smashing things up. I don't want to use products that make me think of that.
But stop. There's something way worse been going on.
There's been a lot of social marketing. And by accident or design it has taken advantage of existing schisms that have formed across the gaming sphere as the hobby becomes further reaching and more inclusive. Taken advantage of the little blogosphere we call our press.
We have an extensive enthusiast press. Let's say you are into hunting, And you're reading a hunting magazine. You're getting your news and ads and reviews of hype new products (fake deer butt scent? I have no idea why I picked hunting for this analogy). You're also getting opinion pieces, features that are thinly-veiled product rollout, letters to the editor. It's enjoyable, it's light and digestible. Really fun reading when you're into a hobby. Enthusiast press. Hired geeks.
Hired geeks are all we have. It's a big business now with big money involved. And now there are these stripes of social change being entwined with the gaming culture. You'd think it would be time for more serious reporting, but mostly we just have this enthusiast press. Reporting is entwined with editorial. Platform oriented outlets sweetin and spin stories to coddle their audiences. Confirmation bias lends flagrantly biased authors a bed of manufactured credibility. By accident or design, this has been turned to epic's favor.
The pre-existing disdains for steam and PC gaming at large are one and the same; simple platform wars. Arguments over valve itself spark gnarly threads all around the internet every day. Criticism comes non-stop, usually in the form of specious arguments about curation or forum moderation. A lot of this comes from console gamers, because steam made PC the best console. Formerly apart from the platform waring, there has been an existing pre-egs undercurrent associating the significant subculture of bigotry that plagues all gaming to PC gamers in particular. By accident or design, these things have been brought into alignment in epics favor.
Look at the way American politics is discussed on social media now. Have a look. It's awful. It makes me retch. A lot of people act a certain predictable way now. The us president can seriously throw the whole world off his tail now by doing something even worse the next day and the day after that. Like clockwork. It exhausts people who care about the truth, it energizes people who don't, and it can be used to normalize bad actions in an accelerated way.
Speaking of normalization, I suppose that's just the way it is these days. It's just so ugly. It's at least an outright mean marketing campaign. Maybe even cruel if you look at how things have been going on era. And of course, we're at the ass end of it. Which doesn't feel too good.
How is presenting facts vindictive? There would be no editorializing associated with it and only present information citable sources.
I don't think it's a good idea, either. Here's what I'm thinking: sensible EGS skeptics will like it. But insane, death threatening mobs will LOVE it.
Imagine working on that and having it posted by bottom-dwelling harassers over and over again for years.