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this post was submitted on 04 Oct 2023
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One interesting thing about Valve, especially when people start talking negatively about Epic in relation to Steam, is that they have attempted to argue in court that Steam is a subscription based service. It did not work out for them, but the end goal was them wanting to say that they did not have to provide access to purchased titles.
I did not know that. I wonder if it was argued to give them the freedom to do as they please to potentially cover their asses or if it was with a goal in mind like a rental service or a streaming service like Stadia.
I wonder if it was around the same time Steam Machines or Steam Link were really being pushed.
I'm not really sure why, but most people aren't aware the extent that Valve has been litigated against. When they went into Australia, they basically disregarded numerous laws and we're fined and called out on all of them. The subscription-based service idea they tried to pass was in a French court though. I think that was 2018. Here's a link to more of it: https://www.engadget.com/2019-09-19-french-court-valve-steam-resold.html
Thanks for the link.
I wonder how long they plan on dragging this out for. I heard a bit about the debate regarding reselling games but I don't recall hearing about Valve backing down.
I'm confused by your comment; are you saying Steam claimed they were a streaming service, or Epic claimed they were a streaming service, and what was the end goal? Do you by chance have an article about it? I'm interested in reading more.
I'd search myself but I don't understand enough to know what to search for.
I tried throwing some keyword soup into Google and got nothing. "steam epic claim streaming service court legal"