Talya wrote:
What doesn't make sense is that if I'm playing Portal 2 on Steam, my husband can't log on to the other computer and play Arkham Asylum, because they're on the same steam account. With physical copies that wouldn't be a problem.
Sure you can. Just have your husband play Steam in offline mode. As long as the PC and/or game has been played online recently, it should work fine in offline mode, and won't need to log into the steam account at all.
Foamy wrote:
Sure, this is an extreme example, but I have more control over that physical cartridge than I would of an installed version that is tied to an account. (Assuming Steam-like controls on the new Xbox) I don't want to have to redownload "my" game should the hardware crash. I'd rather be able to pick up a new one and just pop the disk in and get right back to playing.
If your hardware crashes, you still have to find the discs and reinstall the game, then patch it, and also make sure to keep up with your CD-keys. Also, you do know that you can use the "Backup Game Files" option in Steam to create a physical disc of the installed game, right? That way, if your hardware fails, you can just reinstall from the physical backup disc. And not only that, but the backup makes a copy of the game in it's current state, including patches, so that when you reinstall, you don't have to spend as much time downloading all of the game updates, and you can get back to playing sooner.
Trust me, it took me a long time to get over my initial hatred of Steam. I resisted for the longest time. But now I realize, resistance is futile. I really much prefer the Steam approach to games, and I hope many more companies start to embrace it in the future, instead of treating paying customers like common thieves.