this post was submitted on 26 Oct 2024
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Does anyone else also think that buying Steam games makes even less sense now that this has happened and Steam has clarified that we're only buying licenses?
I'm asking this as it feels like right now Itch.io might be the only company that allows devs to directly sell and share their binaries/source code and even then, since Itch.io is under the MIT license there's no guarantee that they wouldn't go source available and then proprietary afterwards.
I feel like as gamers, we're kind of in a shitty situation atm as old games are highly unlikely to go FOSS, Steam's not "selling" games (they legally can't say that anymore), and the last potential solution isn't guaranteed :/
It's hard to see games preservation going anywhere in North America with this ruling. We got dealt a real shit hand man
Sorry for the rambling, I'm just real unhappy about the state of the gaming ecosystem
Sorry to break it to you, but this has been the state of games purchasing/preservation since at least the 90s. Check instruction manuals for old cartridge games, most have disclaimers in the back that you only purchased a license.
The bright side is that despite all of that, games preservation is still going quite strong. Just through piracy and not entirely legal means. This really doesn't change anything, except online only games won't be as easy to preserve as people had hoped. This isn't a step back in any way. It's just a confirmation that things are still what they have been for decades.