FarSky wrote:
I forget, why is Origin = evil but Steam = good?
Because everything I've read from indie developers (the only guys who will even make an effort to talk vaguely around the terms of their contracts) indicates that Valve is very reasonable and helpful with everything regarding developer/distributor relationships and pricing with Steam.
Because that, while, yes, Valve products are Steam-exclusive and require the installation of Steam, that accounts for about 1 game every 5 years in recent history. Hardly a concern when it comes to monopoly discussions. Compare that to the massive amount of titles that go platform-exclusive when EA decides they want to get into the digital delivery business.
Because Steam is a feature-rich community with a record of innovative risk taking in developing new features that actually provide utility and value to the customer. Origin's history of features include crashing on launch days. Repeatedly.
Because Steam has reasonable DRM-features, including an offline mode that is pretty good. I've heard of some people having issues with it, but it's always worked flawlessly as advertised for me. I find the balance they strike between offering the developer/publisher some peace of mind against piracy and user-invasiveness to be quite reasonable. Origin games (including SimCity) do not strike such a balance -- SimCity will close the game if you lose internet connection, for instance.
EA created Origin not to create a competitor to drive innovation and quality in the marketplace. It created Origin so that it could milk DLC bloat for every last penny. Its dream revenue model is as bad as most social games, and its games have been moving that direction for two or three years, now.
Valve has earned a reputation for taking creative risks and being driven to create compelling and interesting games. EA has earned a reputation for churning out annual sequels and shutting down the backends for the games they replace. In contrast, Counter-Strike remains one of the most played games on Steam.
I already have one Digital Distribution Portal on my computer. Origin does not give me any compelling arguments (except for ONE GAME) to switch. The idea of inviting a new client onto my computer for every distributor, or even creating accounts for every developer who wants to make a multiplayer game, is not appealing to me in this age of account database hacks by criminal and for-the-lulz elements. Valve attracts incredible talent and genius by being forward-thinking, progressive, and a harbor for innovation, in addition to being a genuinely good place to work, from all the accounts I've read. EA... well, no. As such, I trust Valve with my data more than I trust EA.
But then, I'm sure I've been over this all before, right?