SpikyGOG: Lately I am thinking about old times, years back when we had no digital distribution of games. Playing or just owning a game had some special feeling that's hard to describe. Dunno if it's only me, but I don't understand people that support systems like steam. Why do they force you to install software that might be spying your activity, software and stuff without your permission or knowledge? Also being dependent on something to let me play game I purchased is not OK. GoG, for instance, is perfect example of digital distribution that I fully support and prefer. I purchase a game and I can actually download it, back it up on my HDD without need of any spying software.
There are more jokes in gaming world lately (Xbox One anyone?), but talking about this would be worthless, as it has been discussed many times already.
So what is your opinion about steam?
Put it this way - I like the idea of Steam, but not its implementation. It's something that works a lot better in theory than in practice.
I agree with you that PC gaming was a far superior experience in the 90s and early 2000s, which I'd say really was the golden era of PC gaming. You'd buy a game, install it, apply the odd patch and play it with whatever hardware you had to hand. You didn't have to beg the publisher for permission to play your legally bought game, you could sell the games you no longer wanted and delve through thrift stores and fleamarkets to find out-of-print classics.
The idea of Steam is a sound one - have access to all of your games everywhere, autopatched. And in many ways, the idea of having a unified platform for PC gaming alongside PSN and Xbox LIVE is a nice one.
But while autopatching may save you a couple of minutes of googling and installing, it also forces you to use the latest version, regardless of whether it is the best version. There have been numerous occasions where patches have introduced game-breaking bugs - Skyrim, Dungeon Defenders, various Paradox games, for instance.
Steam's DRM leaves a lot to be desired. I have frequently had problems - especially during sale periods - with actually being able to play my games. I've had problems with retail keys being invalid. PC gamers long mocked console gamers for region locks, and yet Steam brought region locking to PC gaming.
Steam's support is nothing short of useless, but this is no real secret.
But one of my biggest problems with Steam is the attitudes of some of its most ardent fanboys. I personally find the ideas often put forward highly offensive - that it is too much work to change a disc, too much effort to go out and actually buy a game from a store, too difficult to download a patch. It lends credence to the of the stereotypical PC gamer: a fat, lazy, antisocial slob for whom leaving the house is too much of a chore.
And then there's the myth of the Steam sale - the idea that you can get $50 dollar games for $5 after just three months, although no-one's ever really managed to demonstrate a rock-solid example. What happens if physical were ever to be eliminated? Do people seriously believe that the sales will continue then? No. If competition ever disappears, you can look forward to paying $50 for years for your games.
But the sad thing is, Steam doesn't actually need all that much tweaking to become a superb platform. Offer DRM-free downloads alongside the integrated versions, stop irrevocably binding retail versions to accounts, and get a decent support team together. If Valve did those three simple things, I wouldn't have a bad word to say about it. Unfortunately though, publishers are for the most part only interested in Steam for its DRM, and if Steam ever changed for the better, publishers would just flock to the next big DRM scheme like flies to shit.