this post was submitted on 10 Nov 2025
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My own experience of problems with the "Steam way" is wanting to install and run a new game whilst offline (for example, when I moved houses and was waiting to get landline Internet running, whilst mobile Interned was too slow or expensive to download anything but the tinyiest of games, all the while my external HD with a collection of GOG offline installers gave me plenty of options) and installing games in machines with older versions of Windows because the Steam Application doesn't support those old OS versions anymore (plus, in all honesty, you definitelly don't want to to connect such machines to the Internet for security reasons).
Further, as I said in a different post, I can run my GOG games through Lutris by default sandboxed with networking disabled, but I can't do that in Steam.
More in general, as a Techie since the 90s I've long been very aware (and averse) to the dangers of having software or data which is supposedly yours yet is de facto under direct control of an external 3rd party for whom you're nothing (i.e. not a mate you lent a CD to, but a big company with a massive Legal budget controlling your access to it using phone-home validation), so out of principle I heavilly favor sellers who do not try and retain control of what I bought from them. Same reason I didn't like "phone home" or "dependent on external servers" hardware or DRM-wrapped books or music, well before the recent wave of enshittification and increase in problems like digital books taken away from people because of some licensing dispute (or even their accounts just being terminated) or hardware bricked because the servers were switched off.
Whilst it might seem like an old-fashioned sense of ownership, that posture has saved me from pretty much all the effects of the enshittification wave.
Got nothing really to add to that or challenge.
Yep, I am personally just a bit more comfortable with the convience of Steam, at the moment... but oh yes, when Gabe announces he's retiring, I'm backing up everything.
I dunno, I mod (as in, make mods, as well as configure combos of other ones, hell I even mod mods lol) a lot, and I've just... got my own method, at this point, would be hard to fully describe lol.
It is a very appealing proposal and that's why I myself have bought games from Steam when I can't find them in GOG. Further, I'm not strict about always downloading GOG offline installers for all my games, even though if I don't I run the risk of losing those games if for example the GOG store closes.
And, as you point out, "so far, so good".
I've just been burned by earlier forms of enshittification and service relationships misportrayed as purchases of forever access.
Also, almost 4 decades of using or in Tech have made me very aware of elements which can affect long term usability of software and hardware.
So nowadays I'll only ever spend money on things which follow that scheme if I'm willing to lose it, even if for now they seem fine, and favour things that I'll have a chance to still make work 10 or 20 years down the line (funilly enough, this week I've been playing Jagged Alliance 2, which is a 26 years old game with gameplay that's still as fun as back then).
Hah! JA2 huh?
Fuck its been a while.
Yeah, way way back, I had a choice between either ... playing JA2 with a group...
Or joining the mod team for Project Reality, which is now Squad.
I was just a beta tester / ideas guy, but uh, I'm proud of my choice, led me further into making my own mods, learning programming, etc.
That being said, no irrational hate toward JA2, solid game, doesn't get the recognition it should, I just... had my own ideas and wanted to be a part of making something, even before I was outta high school.