- Apr 17, 2005
- 13,465
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Originally posted by: gregor7777
SUpreme Commander on there? That's THQ right?
Originally posted by: BladeVenom
It's $29.99 in store last time I checked, and with the box you get discs and the instruction manual. Not to mention not being locked to your Steam account.
Originally posted by: BladeVenom
It's $29.99 in store last time I checked, and with the box you get discs and the instruction manual. Not to mention not being locked to your Steam account.
Originally posted by: coloumb
Originally posted by: BladeVenom
It's $29.99 in store last time I checked, and with the box you get discs and the instruction manual. Not to mention not being locked to your Steam account.
2 biggest advantages of using STEAM:
- If you misplace your game, you're out of luck. With STEAM - you log in and download the game [and back it up if needed]
- Environmentally sound - no boxes, docs, cd's.
Originally posted by: Schadenfroh
Originally posted by: BladeVenom
It's $29.99 in store last time I checked, and with the box you get discs and the instruction manual. Not to mention not being locked to your Steam account.
Retail products have become laced with Starforce and SecuROM, steam is usually a safer bet, even though it is DRM laced... it is less prone to messing with your system and when you uninstall it it is gone, unlike Starforce and SecuROM that require special tools to remove after you uninstall all of the games that use them. (not sure what kind of DRM these titles use).
Originally posted by: Noema
Originally posted by: gregor7777
SUpreme Commander on there? That's THQ right?
Supposedly they'll add S.T.A.L.K.E.R., Supreme Commander and the Warhammer 40K games soon.
This makes me very happy![]()
Originally posted by: lupi
Do you still need to be connected to steam to play single player?
Originally posted by: coloumb
Originally posted by: BladeVenom
It's $29.99 in store last time I checked, and with the box you get discs and the instruction manual. Not to mention not being locked to your Steam account.
2 biggest advantages of using STEAM:
- If you misplace your game, you're out of luck. With STEAM - you log in and download the game [and back it up if needed]
- Environmentally sound - no boxes, docs, cd's.
Originally posted by: potato28
Originally posted by: Schadenfroh
Originally posted by: BladeVenom
It's $29.99 in store last time I checked, and with the box you get discs and the instruction manual. Not to mention not being locked to your Steam account.
Retail products have become laced with Starforce and SecuROM, steam is usually a safer bet, even though it is DRM laced... it is less prone to messing with your system and when you uninstall it it is gone, unlike Starforce and SecuROM that require special tools to remove after you uninstall all of the games that use them. (not sure what kind of DRM these titles use).
Steam uses friendly DRM, but its very hard to crack. I knew people that cracked all sorts of DRM systems and they always said that Steam was the hardest.
Originally posted by: BrunoPuntzJones
Can you sell what you purchase on steam? Or is it just a license to play the game?
I kinda like retail from a cost standpoint. I don't play stuff right when it comes out.
Like if I buy CoH for $30, play it, then I can sell it for say $22 or so. I'm never going to go back and play it again most likely, so just sell it. Net cost is $8, compared to $27 on Steam.
Originally posted by: JAG87
The day EA goes on steam, I will never need to go to a game store ever again. They really need to get BF2 on steam already. I CANNOT stand installing that game and having to flip through 5 CDs. I back up my steamapps folder to my exterrnal regularly, and whenever I format my steam is up and running again in no time. With all my configs and everything. No wasting time.
Please Valve sign a contract with EA, get rid of gamespy, its such trash. Sigh, why bother, I already know this will never happen.
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Originally posted by: Daverino
People who are afraid of Steam are also afraid of ITunes. Those people that ignore the fact that you can burn your content on your own CDs and have it forever. . .