this post was submitted on 01 Dec 2025
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ITT: a lot of people talking about "owning" games on GoG.
Call me old-fashioned, but if you can't sell it or share it then you don't own it. Valve does a much better job of communicating what you are actually paying for in my opinion.
Steam is also just a great client. It handles inputs better than anything else I've tried. The Linux support is incredible. Remote Play is incredible. The store experience is pretty great. Mod support through the Steam Workshop is great- I always sigh and roll my eyes any time I'm looking into missing a game and find that I need to download random files from a GitHub page or NexusMods.
I have a Steam Deck, and yes I've done my share of tinkering and customization under-the-hood with it, but at the end of the day the experience straight out of the box is still my preferred way to go. I've seen all these "replacement" UI's out there people have made and like... It's really great that it's possible. It'll help make sure that the hardware is supported for a long time after Valve has one inevitably moved on. It's great for times when I want to dive in and tinker with something. But for actually playing games? The stock Steam Deck experience is still the way to go. Everything just... Works.
I hate DRM, but I appreciate how Valve at least identifies games with DRM. There's a lot of games on my wishlist that regularly go on sale for ridiculously low prices, and I routinely check to see whether they have removed Denuvo yet. Those games usually just aren't on GoG at all. Sonic Frontiers? Not listed- if Sega ever decides to stop paying Denuvo for that game then on Steam I will see that the next time it goes on sale (I might get an email too since I follow an anti-Denuvo curator, it I'm not 100% sure about that). On GoG it's just... Maybe I'll happen to see it featured on the front page as a new addition at some point?
GoG advertises themselves as a carefully curated platform, and that's not what I want. I want to be able to see all of the games available, have information about them conveyed in a trustworthy and consistent manner, and make my own informed decisions. I admire what GoG does, and I have a handful of games from them, but I don't think their overall offering compares favorably to Valve.
Of course there's price. Sales happen on both platforms and it's good to compare price histories. But even then the MSRP's and the % discounts are usually standardized across platforms by the publisher with little difference across platforms (unless you're using a Nintendo device lol).