James
MyGaming Alumnus
EA blames Steam's “restrictive terms of service†for Battlefield 3 no-show
But they’re hoping to “work out an agreementâ€
But they’re hoping to “work out an agreementâ€
We do not guarantee that any Content or Entitlement will be available at all times or at any given time or that we will continue to offer particular Content or Entitlements for any particular length of time. We reserve the right to change and update Content and Entitlements without notice to you. If you have not used your Entitlements or Account for twenty four (24) months or more and your Account has associated Entitlements, your Entitlements will expire and your Account may be cancelled for non-use. Once you have redeemed your Entitlements, that content is not returnable, exchangeable, or refundable for other Entitlements or for cash, or other goods or services.
It could be EA trying to be "evil", or Valve's TOS might have an unnecessary hoop to jump through that they may need to re-evaluate.
Wow where did you pull that one out?The whole steam system if flawed.. Call me old fashioned, but I do not enjoy paying for a game three times.
Yeah don't you know, Steam always makes you buy the game 3 times before you can actually play it, sesh common everyone knows that. "whistling:Wow where did you pull that one out?
The whole steam system if flawed.. Call me old fashioned, but I do not enjoy paying for a game three times.
Wow where did you pull that one out?
Yeah don't you know, Steam always makes you buy the game 3 times before you can actually play it, sesh common everyone knows that. "whistling:
I've heard this argument before but last time it was only paying twice, I guess it must be inflation or something.
Its not because of in-game DLC's, but rather because EA offered Direct-2-Drive an exclusive DLC.Nah, Valve's ToS merely state that content for games hosted on Steam has to be delivered through Steam. Steam then takes 30% of the money made from the sale for themselves, which I think is fair, because they have to pay for bandwidth used when players download the games. EA tried to bypass this by rule by selling DLC for their games in-game, therefore bypassing Steam entirely. This means Steam would host content they don't get any money for, which is unfair towards Steam. EA has to sell their DLC through Steam so Steam can take their 30% cut. EA was very much aware of this when they started selling their DLC in-game, which leads me to think it's a purposeful move on EA's part, so that they don't have to outright pull their games from Steam.
It's also funny that EA never had issues with this rule until after they launched Origin.
http://www.1up.com/news/ea-desire-stay-in-touch-keeping-games-off-steamUpdate: DeMartini told Gamasutra today that Crysis 2's removal from Steam was due to DLC being available through Direct2Drive, but not Steam.