A forum for discussing and organizing recreational softball and baseball games and leagues in the greater Halifax area.
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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Gabe is a pretty good billionaire. He has made a lot of people happy. He doesn't spend his money trying to manipulate society. I think Gabe deserves a new yacht.
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30% is too much! Clearly Steam doesn't need that much to operate (the percentage of each sale that go to Valve)
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Epic only takes 12%, and they too have cloud saves. If they could take 15% while being a multibillion dollar company, then taking 30% is by definition overcharging. And that many others also overcharge doesn't change that fact.I'm not disagreeing. Epic's 12% would still be hugely profitable for Valve.
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I'm not giving Valve recognition, I'm recognizing that Valve offers good/useful products and services. Maybe I should have said "acknowledge" instead of "recognize", but you're saying something different than me.
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Can't remember a single Valve game that is $60 (today $80?) that has a Battle Pass, built in micro transactions that are pay-to-win, half-assed DLCs that should've been in base game, or a game being unfinished mess on release. Valve is not a saint. But even with lootboxes they bring way more good to gaming industry in comparison to literally any other gaming company. ::: spoiler Bonus round! Can you guess a game that has all these 4 points? :::
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For cosmetic only items, and in return they let everyone play for free. It doesn't bother me as a business model.I don't think monetizing gambling addictions so others can play for free is a great argument.
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It can be both, you're rejecting it *because* you fail to understand it. Dude, in a rationally organized world we wouldn't *need* fucking charities, because things would just be funded by reasonable tax structures and governments that care more about taking care of their own people instead of bombing foreign nations. Why would we need charities if things were funded well enough as it is? You're *deliberately* missing the point.
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For cosmetic only items, and in return they let everyone play for free. It doesn't bother me as a business model.
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> But it seems like almost every other storefront operates under those margins for digital sales (not just in gaming) Notable that Epic Games takes only a 12% cut, and 0% of the first $1 million in sales (effectively 0% for the vast majority of indie games). A cynical take is that they're just doing this to attract developers to their store, which is almost certainly true, but it doesn't necessarily mean they'll take a higher cut if they become dominant. Unfortunately the Epic Games platform is missing the majority of extra features that Steam has (built in streaming, family share, input binding, big picture mode, etc) Tim Sweeney, CEO of Epic Games, is about 80% as wealthy as Gabe Newell, and has done much more philanthropy, although it only represents probably less than one percent of his net worth.
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I would probably donate most of it to a worthy cause. I don't need anywhere near that amount of money, anything over $5M gets donated.Talk is cheap.
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Most comments ITT boil down to two things: * "cat shit is shit, so it's the same as elephant shit" * "cat shit is not the same as elephant shit, so it's not shit"
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Gabe is a pretty good billionaire. He has made a lot of people happy. He doesn't spend his money trying to manipulate society. I think Gabe deserves a new yacht.
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Perks of not taking your company public? I hate two comma mfers as much as the next red blooded American, but Gabe ain't the one.
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Developing a good game is not only a money problem.
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Whether the concept of billionaires is bad is irrelevant when deciding whether one specific billionaire is bad.> Whether the concept of billionaires is bad is irrelevant when deciding whether one specific billionaire is bad. Threre is no such thing as an ethical billionaire. An ethical billionaire doesn't remain a billionaire. If a suddenly recieved a billion dollars I'd be looking into the best way to donate most of it. I'm sure I could survive for the rest of my life just fine on $500 million dollars, and whatever causes I'm donating my money to know what they need and how to spend it better than I would by offering them a couple of rooms on my third yacht.