- May 16, 2000
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And if it doesn't go your way, what then?![]()
Then I just won't play. There are other hobbies. All that matters is holding to one's ideology, no matter what.
And if it doesn't go your way, what then?![]()
So no compromise? - just like the USA CongressThen I just won't play. There are other hobbies. All that matters is holding to one's ideology, no matter what.
So no compromise? - just like the USA Congress
What if your ideology is wrong? You "believe".
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Perhaps that is the problem.Ideology cannot be wrong, by definition.
Check out Ironclad and Stardock's Sins of a Solar Empire. It's essentially DRM free. The only thing you have to do to patch it is download the Impulse program, which you don't to run to play the game, just to patch. It's completely benign.
I understand taking a position and sticking with it, even though I'm more pragmatic about it than you.
I want to play more games than GoG.com offers, so I give Steam money and just accept that I'm possibly "renting" those games.
I paid $3 for Torchlight and have played it for 50 hours so if Steam disappeared tomorrow I wouldn't feel like I'd been ripped off. If you wait for sales you can buy (or "rent" if you prefer) many great games for $5 - 15.
Perhaps you should think of it that way -- you're not buying Fallout 3 or Dragon Age 1 with all of the DLC for $12, you're just signing up for a long term rental that might happen to last for the rest of your life.
