HighCalibreHooch
Member
- May 18, 2004
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People, people, people - didn't you see the sign on your way in?!
"PLEASE DON'T FEED THE TROLLS
-Management"
"PLEASE DON'T FEED THE TROLLS
-Management"
Originally posted by: HighCalibreHooch
People, people, people - didn't you see the sign on your way in?!
"PLEASE DON'T FEED THE TROLLS
-Management"
Originally posted by: Malak
Originally posted by: futuristicmonkey
It's been working pretty good for me ever since I first got it, around when CS 1.6 came out, during the beta period. I've never had any issues with it that prevented me from playing a game on it. And you don't need to mention Friends because on that point alone I agree - I can only remember it working a few times ever.
Guess what? Others have. For one, the people trying to play a single player game where there is no internet. Guess what? Not everyone who has a computer has internet. And half the people that do are on dialup which is flaky. No company should require the internet for a stand-alone application. It requires nothing on the internet except some shaky application that slows load times for no apparent reason.
Speaking of which, benchmarks were put out when HL2 came out that proved Steam made the game run and load slower, a lot slower. All that for an application that downloads patches for you? Talk about a stupid good for nothing "convenience". To top it off, it can prevent you from playing. That's right! One time it told me Steam was too busy to let me play my damn game. I uninstalled HL2 shortly after getting it, almost threw the thing out. I will never buy another Valve game again. They gave me the finger, I closed my wallet.
Originally posted by: futuristicmonkey
I completely agree with what you are saying. There should be a way to streamline the offline mode. I say streamline because the idea of Steam was for authentication. It does seem to be a lot better (for Valve, not the pirates) than just the old cd-key in and play forever. Of course, we need to be realistic - Valve is never going to give up Steam.
I have no doubt that Steam impacts the performance of the game. When I first downloaded Steam I was running a Pentium@200MHz with 32mb of ram, etc..Steam made the games nearly unplayable for me. I would love to be able to separate the games from Steam after they have been updated (also, I'd like better control over when/what is updated) to maybe get an extra ounce of performance. Of course, Valve is probably in the mindset that people playing it's games online (the only good reason for Steam - since the Won version of Half-Life and its expansions are much better than the Steam version) are using hardware that is half decent. It's a business thing, Ii think.
You have reminded me - I think I got that error once - though I don't remember what hardware I was using, or if my isp's network was being a little screwy. Heck - that could've been the cause for your problem. Besides - when I did get that error - it was a long time ago - I think they've worked it out by now.
Steam is an agressive little bit of software. I love it. Of course, I'm in agreement with most of the people I've heard talk about it - Valve's implementation of it has sucked for some things, but for most - you really need to appreciate what it's trying to be.
Originally posted by: Malak
Video games shouldn't have authentication.
1/3 of America doesn't even have a computer, we aren't even close to having a society setup to allow this sort of thing.
Originally posted by: VIAN
-Battlefield, even after all this time, still has bugs.
-BF2, released half assed and at a higher pricepoint of 55 dollars, that was supposedly due to development time. Highly buggy, missing critical features that seemed like they put almost no thought in the game, other than graphics, which is also an annoyance to configure. The inconveniance that BF2 is.. is such that the game must've been beta when it was released. Still, 6 months later, many issues aren't resolved.
-BF2 expansions look like crap. Clearly something that they should've put in the regular BF2 game, but held it back so that they could sell it to you as a premium. It's not like it's a lot of content anyway. 30 bucks they will charge you for this lack of content expansion to the original game which still, by my standards is in it's beta stage. Apparantly these people shouldn't even be programming if they can't understand the concept of procedure.
-How would you like it to have paid 55 dollars for a game that doesn't work properly and then be forced to watch they're logo. EA Games, Challenge Everything.
EA owns over 60% of DICE's stock last i checked...Aside from that last part, isn't that DICE's responsibility? I
Originally posted by: Schadenfroh
EA owns over 60% of DICE's stock last i checked...Aside from that last part, isn't that DICE's responsibility? I
Originally posted by: Schadenfroh
Man, i sure do love this bug in BF2 where my teamies appear red to me and in enemy uniform!
Hey.... my all seeing eye is not working with BF2... and neither is gamespy arcade.
Wait........ did i just have a crash to desktop?
Damn..... Look at what EA did to Westwood, my favorite RTS game maker is now only a shadow of its former glory and my how everything after Red Alert 1 sucked.
Damn, there goes the Wing Commander series as well as crusader.... RIP Origin studios.
What??? Exclusive deals with the sports franchises, damn... my choices will be limited this year.
Why am i having to pay $50 for a game that has not left beta stage?
It is a good thing BF1 came out of beta... 1 year after its release.
Originally posted by: Doom Machine
its called smart business practice, maybe if you owned a company and something like this not only helps you stay in business but ensures better paid employees,yourself and more investors...perhaps you would think different, if not then you'd be likely finding a job working for someone else.
...plans to make some employees eligible for overtime pay but not offer those workers bonuses or stock options.
Originally posted by: HamburgerBoy
Was it that way when DICE released 1942 and Vietnam?