If you aren't investing back into your company as much as your competitors then they will eventually push you out of the market. It's called the Growth imperative .
Putting back into your company is fine. It's the endless profiteering that sucks, and that ultimately reduces customer experience. Steam keeps it's niche specifically by producing a great customer experience, and getting out of the way.
Steam is also putting back into their company. But there's no need for enshittification. That's a publicly-traded-company, tragedy-of-the-commons thing.
What? Why? If I'm making a million dollars profit a year, why can't I just put it in a bank account or ETFs or whatever every year?
If you aren't investing back into your company as much as your competitors then they will eventually push you out of the market. It's called the Growth imperative .
Putting back into your company is fine. It's the endless profiteering that sucks, and that ultimately reduces customer experience. Steam keeps it's niche specifically by producing a great customer experience, and getting out of the way.
Steam is also putting back into their company. But there's no need for enshittification. That's a publicly-traded-company, tragedy-of-the-commons thing.