VAMET: Dear Friends
...but there are plenty people, that never will buy any product even, if it's very good and highest rated product in the category.
Sometimes I think, how I will be angry and sad, if I will create some products let say for 2 years hard work, and other guys will not buy it, but steal it.
It's not fair... I have got family to care, childer, wife and this is my work.
So is it equal Piracy = Stealing? What is your opinion?
Best regards.
Sincerely
Even if a product is great and high rated - "for some" that doesn't mean it's the same for all....Beyond that, the high rated part is usually "pure marketing" - you rarely see a "honest review" this days since top gaming sites are known to be crooked, by approving some compensations for their reviews on a game (especially those from major devs).
RageGT gived some valid scenarios for your dilemma... which are probably well-known by now by most gamers.
The melodrama you added on 2'n part of your post is unrealistic - game developers are payed to do their job when doing it, not after is done and only if it's successful. Programing is one of the top payed jobs and "real good programers" have nothing to worry about "financially speaking". If games fail the company could get ruined (happened before) but that has nothing to do with Piracy - more like "those responsible for that project".
Furthermore - software is lacking a "legal quality control" like with any other physical product... if you get a piece of meat and it's rotten, a video card that turns up to be faulty or any other physical product - you can appeal to Consumer Protection and get your money back, the ones selling even getting fined for that.... but if you a buy a game (or others kind of software) that tuns to be bugged and not working as advertised - all you can do is "sue that company" which is usually a last resort for similar problems with physical products.
Simply put it - they have no return policy, if you buy a game that's bugged, not working as expected - you're forced to keep it.
I don't approve with piracy, same as i don't approve with costumer rights when it comes to software... if they want software be treated as any other physical products, same rules should apply to them - not just the ones where they can have a gain, even if selling something broken.