Posted July 03, 2021
dtgreene: The problem is that Steam explicitly encourages and provides DRM, so even if you buy a game that happens to not be infected with it, a portion of what you pay goes toward the development of DRM.
Furthermore, there's the issue that Steam doesn't make it clear which games are DRM-encumbered and which are not, and further there's no guarantee that DRM won't be added in an update.
I will also add that Steam provides no support whatsoever to facilitate DRM-free gaming. Afaik, they have no offline installers and it is not possible to download and install a DRM-free game you have purchased there without either using the Steam client or a third-party workaround, which is far from ideal. Furthermore, there's the issue that Steam doesn't make it clear which games are DRM-encumbered and which are not, and further there's no guarantee that DRM won't be added in an update.
Even if Steam provided offline installers, I would not buy games from them, due to the fact that they actively provide and push DRM and they are probably the one actor that has been the most responsible for the normalization of DRM and client integration in games over the past 20 years.