According to a report on trade site MCV, two âbig-name digital retailersâ for the PC market are staring down the barrel of financial ruin, while two major British retailers are reportedly considering a ban on games that include Steam integration.
âPublishers donât give a shit, they donât care what happens to the customer. Which is the crucial point, because Steam do,â the director of âa fledgling Steam rivalâ told the site. A fledgling rival, eh? Direct2Drive, perhaps? GamersGate? Impulse, maybe?
The criticism of Steam â an online multiplayer platform and digital shopfront run by Half-Life developers Valve â doesnât stop there.
âIâve fought hard for my customer, and never before have I had to give my customers away. Steam is killing the PC market and it is no wonder digital retailers are failingâ, the unnamed director continues.
âSteam is locking down the market.â
See, hereâs where these digital competitors have it wrong. Yes, itâs hardly an ideal set of circumstances that a single company is effectively taking over the mainstream PC downloadable market. More competition would be good for everyone. But thereâs a reason Steam is so dominant: itâs the only service thatâs doing things right
The sooner competing services quit bitching and start putting together comparable platforms where you can shop, play and communicate as easily as you can on Steam, the sooner weâll take their criticisms as something more than just sour grapes.
As for the bricks-and-mortar retailers, there are reportedly fears that selling boxed copies of games that include mandatory Steam integration is only going to encourage customers to not only shop online in the future, but shop with Steam, which is a competitor to these own retailerâs digital shopfront ambitions.
As a result of this, âtwo major retailersâ in the UK are threatening publishers that they will cease stocking games that include such a requirement in any form.