• Jarix@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    Why is this any different than any other supplier/retail relationship? Hey you are giving a deal to another store, we want a better price. No? Okay then we won’t carry your product if you can give us a better price but don’t want to.

    Explain to me why that’s a problem with Valve, and not every other business ever.

    I’m assuming I’m not understanding something correctly and hoping you can explain what I’m missing

    • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      Valve is setting the shelf price. On the supplier’s own store.

      To reiterate, what Valve said was “we don’t like that sticker price. Change it to match ours or we won’t carry your product.” It’s not Valve requesting “a better deal” on the supply end, it’s Valve demanding sticker price parity.

      In any normal, competitive market, this would be ridiculous.

      Either Valve would reduce their profit margin to match the other store’s price, or if they can’t, stop selling the good and part ways with the supplier. The game would be sold everywhere else, business as usual.

      But Valve controls majority of the PC game market, hence this would be commercial suicide for Ubisoft. So they can’t.

      They control the price of their supplier and all the competing storefronts.


      …How is that not blatant monopolism?

      And why would other companies doing that make it okay? It’s nothing close to a healthy market.

      • nyctre@piefed.social
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        3 hours ago

        Yeah, that’s what they’re alleging. And if it turns out to be true, that’s fucked and hope they get punished for it.

        However, in the article there’s two quotes and neither prove that’s what they’re doing.

        The reason given was that the Steam price was “significantly higher than what was available at other retailers for the same version of the game.”

        This sounds consistent with all the previous instances and with their rule of matching whatever low price others provide which is not about price fixing.

      • Jarix@lemmy.world
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        4 hours ago

        They agreed to valves terms when they listed their game. Then they aren’t following the deal, and Valve responds. I don’t see your problem. Valve takes 30%. If the game is less than they are selling it on steam else where and the deal was we will sell your game for you, but you can’t sell it cheaper elsewhere then that’s fair as I see it. “But Steam is Very good so we have to sell it there!” Is not a good argument if that’s being made

        • BandanaBug@piefed.social
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          3 hours ago

          Do valve’s terms dictate they can delist your game if you sell it somewhere else for cheaper?? Even if it is, that’s fucking shitty to have in your terms lmao

          • Jarix@lemmy.world
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            2 hours ago

            As I understand it that’s the price everyone pays to use steam. Dont fucking use it if you dont like it. Why is this a problem? Because steam is too good is the only thing I’m hearing and that’s not steams fault. Everyone else has to do the same thing. Valve didn’t hide this. Also note that they didn’t in fact delist it. They merely considered it.

            This is the same problem/argument I had when microtransactions in games started. Everyone jumped on board and now we have a gaming industry that because users can’t fucking say no they bitch and complain when they don’t get what they want.

            Cry me a fucking river. Go sell your game everywhere else but Steam. Too fucking bad.

            Also I have bought literally hundreds of games from other places, cheaper than steam. Many of them I needed steam to download the games…

            Steam isnt doing anything wrong just because they are handsdown the goat of digital distribution. It’s about as anti competitive as Wayne Gretzky was at his best

        • Capable_Coping@piefed.social
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          3 hours ago

          The terms in question being anti competitive. Steam being very good is not an argument against them using there prominent position in the gaming sphere to do the same monopolistic shit Amazon did to enshitify shopping

        • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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          3 hours ago

          “But Steam is Very good so we have to sell it there!” Is not a good argument if that’s being made.

          That’s it!

          That’s the argument!

          It’s that Steam is so good that Ubisoft has no business choice but to accept Valve’s terms and sell it there.

          It’s literally not viable to sell it cheaper on Ubisoft’s storefront, not to speak of every other gaming storefront in existence: Steam is more essential than all of them put together.

          The pricing is not market driven.

          If that’s not monopolistic, I don’t know what is, and if you still don’t see that I just don’t think we’re going to resolve this disagreement, because our perspectives are light years apart.

          • Jarix@lemmy.world
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            3 hours ago

            Then Ubisoft is a failed company if they can’t make a product that people want to buy. I have 0 empathy for them.

            • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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              3 hours ago

              If by “products” you mean games, Ubisoft games are selling just fine on Steam.

              It’s not a function of the product, in this case. But the storefront.

              • Jarix@lemmy.world
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                2 hours ago

                That’s entirely on the companies that made the game if they can’t convince people to type ubisoft.com into their browser and buy the game they want just because it’s not on steam.

                Boycott steam if you don’t like this boilerplate deal steam has with everyone else

    • The second one with WB seems pretty reasonable as a business. If they’re gonna set the price at your store to be so much higher that nobody will buy it from you, why bother carrying it at all?

      The one with Ubisoft, however, does not sound reasonable witthout knowing what, exactly, this starter pack was and how it worked. Was it a stand alone thing inside the game like some operators and skins, or was it something associated specifically with a Steam key that you are buying elsewhere? It sure does not sound like it would have a Steam key or have any specific connection to Steam except that it probably works for any version of the game, including if you have it on Steam, so it seems pretty sketch.

      • Jarix@lemmy.world
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        4 hours ago

        But if Ubisoft agreed to the terms then I don’t understand the problem with Valve taking action

        • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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          3 hours ago

          The problem is that Valve is even in that position in the first place.

          A storefront with pricing terms a supplier can’t say no to, with no viable alternative, is anticompetitive. If it was a competitive market, Ubisoft would break the agreement and sell lower, with dynamic pricing on other stores.

          Valve has every right to take action on their own terms, of course, but that’s not the issue.

          • Jarix@lemmy.world
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            2 hours ago

            valve is a game company, did so good at helping others sell their games that you people call them anticompetitive. That’s just fucking laughable and I will never understand why so many of you seem to miss that. They didn’t go out and give a different deal to anyone else. But Ubisoft broke the terms they agreed to because they wanted to use VALVES service to hawk their wares. Well they have to pay the Piper, and they don’t get to cry foul if they try to fuck over the hand that fed them.

            You can’t succeed without Valve is a dumb argument.

            Blizzard had no problem with battlenet until they pissed in their customers faces.

            Good old games is alive and kicking

            Humble bundle now has a storefront

            Greenman games is doing just fine.

            And if you don’t like it then just stop using it and do the hard work yourself but NOOO that’s too hard to have to figure out how to actually sell your product.

            God I hope valve just shuts steam down some day and says fuck you to everyone who complains like this

    • jjj@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      4 hours ago

      It’s common for those “other stores” to just be the dev’s own store or a store which takes a smaller cut than Valve.

      To me, anyways, it seems perfectly expected for a business to want to pass on Valve’s charges to the customer. Whether this is harmful depends on whether you focus on the player or developer, and whether the developer responds by making the game cheaper everywhere or more expensive everywhere.