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Gabe Newell caps off Steam Machine week by taking delivery of a new $500 million superyacht with a submarine garage, on-board hospital and 15 gaming PCs
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How? All you're really doing here is stereotyping rich people. For example, Americans are generally fat (higher obesity rate than much of the world), but that doesn't mean *all* Americans are fat. To determine whether a random American is fat, we need to actually look at them, not just know their nationality.What do you mean how? The concept of a billionaire existing being bad has a massive relevance as to whether one individual a billionaire is bad. If the mere fact of being a billionaire is bad, which it obviously is, then it doesn't matter who this individual billionaire is he's already tainted by being a billionaire. That's just one plus one equals two. It's inescapable logic. Of course it's relevant.
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Wow I was a day one Steam Machine, Frame and Controller buyer until this. Maybe people like me are the problem.
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Same. I'd probably build a giant dog park, giant playground for kids, lots of natural trails, etc. make it all free. Build shelters for anyone to use, garages where people could work on their cars safely and out of the elements, bike repair stations, things like that. Fuck a super yacht. Tells you how selfish people are, completely unaware how they got where they are. They could spend 10k/day and never spend all their money, not even a dent. Just selfish pricks. Bring the guillotine.My friends and I have this imaginary scenario of funny things we could do with lots of money. A few that come to mind: - buy all the properties around gated community/HOA entrances and exits. build low income housing. - create an organization that intentionally donates to horrible causes on the condition you can say they accepted the money even if they return it. use the logo and organization name as a canary to warn everyone at a glance something is shady. - start an online youtube-like platform that shares the ways the fuck you money is being used hilariously. allow reposts to other platforms like youtube, but never take down our own shit, making any of their attempts to censor it self harming. I think I'm going to start referring to this scenario as #withGabeNewellsmoney
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Imagine having a dedicated yacht hospital for yourself when most can't afford decent healthcare. I hope people stop idolizing Gabe, he is just your average run of the mill billionaire.
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What do you mean how? The concept of a billionaire existing being bad has a massive relevance as to whether one individual a billionaire is bad. If the mere fact of being a billionaire is bad, which it obviously is, then it doesn't matter who this individual billionaire is he's already tainted by being a billionaire. That's just one plus one equals two. It's inescapable logic. Of course it's relevant.> If the mere fact of being a billionaire is bad, which it obviously is, I don't think that's obvious at all. Becoming a billionaire just means you have a billion dollars worth of assets, and it doesn't say anything about how you got that money. There's a high correlation between billionaire's and being a bad person, but it's not 1:1.
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Imagine having a dedicated yacht hospital for yourself when most can't afford decent healthcare. I hope people stop idolizing Gabe, he is just your average run of the mill billionaire.He does at least use his vessels for research via his company Inkfish. They mapping the ocean floor, discover new species, study different underwater environments etc. They actually hold world records for deepest manned dives of all 5 oceans. Billionaires still shouldn't exist though of course (not /s)
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> If the mere fact of being a billionaire is bad, which it obviously is, I don't think that's obvious at all. Becoming a billionaire just means you have a billion dollars worth of assets, and it doesn't say anything about how you got that money. There's a high correlation between billionaire's and being a bad person, but it's not 1:1.I'm not going to get sidetracked into that conversation. Especially when there is absolutely zero chance of us agreeing on it. The topic was whether or not that determination is relevant. Which again obviously it has to be.
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I'm not going to get sidetracked into that conversation. Especially when there is absolutely zero chance of us agreeing on it. The topic was whether or not that determination is relevant. Which again obviously it has to be.And I argue it's not a given that someone is a bad person just because they have billions of dollars.
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And I argue it's not a given that someone is a bad person just because they have billions of dollars.Cool beans dude, not what we were talking about. We were talking about whether or not that determination is relevant.
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I never understood the appeal of anything rich people like. A yacht? An HOA? A supercar? These don’t appeal to me at all. If given them I would hate them. I mean it might be fun to buy a politician but otherwise it sounds boring.
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He owns a lot of boats, both the RV6000 (currently being constructed) and the Pressure Drop belong to him - pressure drop does some very good science, and has for quite a long time. He *also* owns a fleet of pleasure yachts. The two groups of ships are conflated for... reasons I actually cannot understand.
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Would bet cash money this article was sponsored by Tim Sweeny, who is also a billionaire lol. Not saying this excuses Gabe Newell in any way, but this was made purely to attack Valve's newly announced product. They had no issue when a billionaire with an order of magnitude more wealth than both Tim or Gabe went around advertising his shitty Amazon MMO: https://www.pcgamer.com/jeff-bezos-heralds-new-worlds-success-after-many-failures-and-setbacks-in-gaming/ >It's impossible to say where New World will be in a year, whether it will be on the road to obscurity or finally giving World of Warcraft something to sweat about, but right now it's a huge success that validates the commitment and patience Amazon has taken with it. Bezos may not have had a direct hand in its creation, but as the person who greenlighted Amazon's foray into gaming more than a half-decade ago, you can understand his pride in it. 
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Okay yeah as a non gamer I wasnt sure of the problem. I had heard he has great employee benefits and people generally love the product so I wasnt seeing the issue with the success but thisnis a major issue. Obviously he should be taxed more and all that jazz too.
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No, I mean he _literally does not run those._ It's like blaming the bank for 'running a drug empire' when someone buys some weed.
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He's come a long way on the last decade. 