They could have easily crammed the Steam Deck full of stuff to make it hard to use for piracy - locking down everything, making it usable only to play games you legitimately own, force you to go through who knows what hoops in order to play games on it. That’s what Nintendo or Apple or most other companies do.

But they didn’t, because they realized they didn’t have to. It’s 100% possible to put pirated games on the Switch - in fact, it’s as easy as it could reasonably be. You copy it over, you wire it up to Steam, if it’s a non-Linux game you set it up with Proton or whatever else you want to use to run it, bam. You can now run it in Steam just as easily as a normal Steam game (usually.) If you want something similar to cloud saves you can even set up SyncThing for that.

But all of that is a lot of work, and after all that you still don’t have automatic updates, and some games won’t run this way for one reason or another even though they’ll run if you own them (usually, I assume, because of Steam Deck specific tweaks or installed that are only used when you’re running them on the Deck via the normal method.) Some of this you can work around but it’s even more hoops.

Whereas if you own a game it’s just push a button and play. They made legitimately owning a game more convenient than piracy, and they did it without relying on DRM or anything that restricts or annoys legitimate users at all - even if a game has a DRM-free GOG version, owning it on Steam will still make it easier to play on the Steam Deck.

  • Alien Nathan Edward
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    1 year ago

    The steam deck is how you prevent piracy. If you look at the huge influx of streaming services, you’ll see an example of how you encourage piracy. I recently dropped three of my services in favor of one pirate site that has almost everything. They even offer a subscription tier and I’ve considered it. I’m willing to pay for good content. What I’m not willing to do is pay dozens of middlemen across multiple companies to rip off the people who actually make my favorite shows and then memory hole the shows a few months after they premiere.

    • @epyon22@sh.itjust.works
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      351 year ago

      Recently got a switch. Digital games are same price as physical, locked to my account/switch and saves don’t move easily between devices. Steam deck, I can play on any hardware that can support it TV, PC laptop games cloud save for free. I can play online games for free. I know that games I buy today will be available in 10 years on my next PC. I only buy carts for the switch cause they give me more flexibility still not even the same as steam.

      • @Moonrise2473@feddit.it
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        121 year ago

        I very rarely backup game saves but only the thought of being locked to a console puts me off. I can’t possibly invest 100+ hours in a Pokemon game and lose everything of the battery dies, screen breaks, console is forgotten on a bus or stolen, and so on.

        • @EatYouWell@lemmy.world
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          71 year ago

          Switch save files can be saved in the cloud, but the game devs have to enable it. You can also save them to an SD card.

          • Pepsi
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            51 year ago

            Except for Pokémon games which are saved directly to the internal storage and unable to be moved unless you have the original save device (and it’s working) as well as the new device and transfer the save manually.

            Splatoon is the same. Saves are locked to the system, even with NSO.

            Animal crossing was the same until people raised hell about it.

            • @EatYouWell@lemmy.world
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              11 year ago

              My point was that it’s on the devs, not Nintendo. The functionality exists, devs just need to implement it.

              The same was true for Steam as well, once upon a time.

      • Alien Nathan Edward
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        291 year ago

        Please read 1984. That’s where this term comes from. You’re living through a combination of it and Brave New World.

        • @CancerMancer@sh.itjust.works
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          1 year ago

          Amazon TVs seem like they used 1984 as a reference.

          But yeah somewhere between 1984 and BNW sounds right. The government and the megacorporations are not opposed but in fact the very same party. Instead of mood-numbing or happy drugs, it’s sugar and antidepressants. Instead of government watching you it’s corporations selling every part of your identity down to your menstruation cycle. You are kept in line with debt rather than force, which is honestly worse because you put the shackles on yourself, and you do it because the alternative is worse.

          Your own special hell.

            • @CancerMancer@sh.itjust.works
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              1 year ago

              With respect to social media, I think Fahrenheit 451 might have nailed that best. Everyone involved in a neverending orgy of ego and drama over dumb shit, most of which isn’t real anyway.

              Did anyone predict the agrostophobia?

    • @Whirlybird@aussie.zone
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      1 year ago

      The steam deck does nothing to prevent piracy though? It’s just a portable pc. Nothing about it is making pc gaming any more enticing to make people stop pirating.

    • @Toribor@corndog.social
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      371 year ago

      Seamlessly syncing game saves between my Deck and my primary gaming PC is so nice. Before I travel I just make sure to wake up the deck long enough to get updates and sync saves.

      For non steam games I use syncthing but that always requires just a little bit of work.

      • kratoz29
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        61 year ago

        For non steam games I use syncthing but that always requires just a little bit of work.

        Can you use this feature with games added as a shortcut (bought from other means).

        I’m guessing the answer is no?

        • Onihikage
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          51 year ago

          A non-steam game can be launched through Steam on either device, but Steam doesn’t sync game saves for non-Steam games, hence Toribor’s use of syncthing. Once a sync job is set up for each game’s save folder, it’ll keep them synced about as well as Steam does for native games.

    • @instamat@lemmy.world
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      121 year ago

      I would love to see a chart with my steam purchases over the years. There would be a huge spike up as soon as my deck arrived.

      • @JDubbleu@programming.dev
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        51 year ago

        Same. I play the same 5 games throughout the year and rarely buy anything, but a few games I’d been looking at went on sale. I could’ve pirated them, but it was just so much easier to click buy on my Steam Deck and instantly download and play them. Not to mention cloud saves for free, remote play, and the ability to dock the thing to my 65" 4k TV.

        Steam has robbed me of more money than any streaming service ever could, and I’m not even mad because they provide the best service I’ve ever received no matter how many or few games I buy. They recently identified one of the biggest reasons for refunds and piracy being people who want to validate games will run well on their system, especially on Steam Deck. As a result they’re working on a demo feature so you can test a game before buying it.

      • @hardcoreufo@lemmy.world
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        31 year ago

        Yeah and once I got a steam deck I got back into PC gaming and built a rig spending even more money on steam games. It’s win, win for Gabe.

    • @MrVilliam@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      The deck has made me highly interested in building a desktop for the first time in a long time, running Chimera OS. I didn’t realize something like the deck was possible, and I’d just dock it if it were more powerful, but it doesn’t need to be more powerful as a handheld. I’d love a high end gaming PC that is able to park in the living room and function just fine with my dualsense controller. Prices have mostly come down, so I’ve window shopped a solid build for about $1200, but the GPU alone would’ve been about that much until pretty recently.

    • @Adalast@lemmy.world
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      341 year ago

      Valve is one of those companies that I genuinely believe makes a strong argument for ethical capitalism being possible. Sure, they have some shitty things, but overall they do treat developers and customers reasonably well, they provide hardware and software that is easy to use and non-abusive (not filled with spyware and data harvesters, doesn’t use advertising, is well maintained, etc.). If we could obliterate all of the other major conglomerates and replace them with people/companies that understand that you don’t have to be a massive pile of shit to make money the world would be better off.

      • @Morgikan@lemm.ee
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        131 year ago

        Valve argued in court that you do not own any title in your library and that they are a subscription based service. That’s not very ethical.

        • @ryannathans@aussie.zone
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          71 year ago

          Is that not true though? As much as we hate it, until you get given some transferrable proof of ownership of the game (like an NFT) and ability to play without being tied to one service, it’s the unfortunate reality of online game services.

          It’s easy to go buy a physical game but when it’s online, you don’t own anything - yet

          • xep
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            It’s true. Pragmatically speaking if you don’t have access to the server software you can’t play it if the servers go down, and besides reverse engineering or the goodwill of the developers I’m not aware of any games with online components that continue to be playable after their servers are taken down.

            • JustEnoughDucks
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              21 year ago

              Well then allow me to name a few:

              • Battlefront 2 (the original), still active when the servers have been down for years

              • Titanfall 2. Official servers aren’t technically down, but pretty much unusable and NorthStar is the alternative

              • Counter strike 1.6 is pretty much just community-run servers, same with day of defeat: source. I don’t know if they are tied with valve that if valve shut them down, they wouldn’t be searchable.

              • Supreme commander: Forged Alliance

              Hell, Battle for Middle Earth II still has a small community

              • Valheim has never had official servers. I run my own via docker on debian

              • Unreal Tournament 1999

              • Minecraft (official servers aren’t down, but if they shutdown there would still be 2000 servers)

            • DroneRights [it/its]
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              Back in 2000-2012, a good lot of mainly singleplayer games had optional multiplayer modes. Think Halo, Starcraft, TRON, Titanfall, etc. Even DOOM 2016 had it. These games function with the servers down.

              • @Cracks_InTheWalls@sh.itjust.works
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                01 year ago

                Something I haven’t thought about in a while: In the early 2000s games where you made a direct connection to the other player without an intervening, third-party server were still a thing. You still see it in things like netplay functionality in emulators.

                Is this still a thing at all in 2023? Imagine it would be very niche, but this comment made me curious.

          • @seaturtle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            01 year ago

            Fundamentally I don’t really know how it’d be viable to truly “own” a specific copy of something, when it’s always possible to make infinitely many copies of it. Any such “ownership” is at best essentially just conceptual, aside from perhaps the legal right to annoy other people about the copies they are in possession of.

            So instead my personal take is that I’d rather everything just be offered DRM-free. I don’t necessarily need transferable ownership as much as I just need proper and guaranteed access under my own control after I purchase the product.

              • @seaturtle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                11 year ago

                But anything that exists as digital data can be copied. The same applies to NFTs. Make an NFT image or game or whatever, and it can be copied by whoever has access to it. The only way to prevent such copying is to not release it at all.

                The only stipulation is that copies made without authorization of whoever holds the rights to it would not be “official” instances of the thing, and there are potential copyright restrictions on the use of such copies…but that’s using NFTs to justify copyright law, and aside from “lol copyright”, legal of ownership of an NFT is even more of a mess than traditional legal ownership of an IP.

                • @ryannathans@aussie.zone
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                  01 year ago

                  You’re talking about media linked to by existing NFTs. You can’t copy an NFT and use it, you don’t have the cryptographic keys to mint more. There is a finite number.

        • Pepsi
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          51 year ago

          sure they have done some shitty things

          Here’s to throwing the baby out with the bathwater I guess

        • @LufyCZ@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          21 year ago

          They would probably have issues with publishers if you actually owned the titles.

          It’d probably make them very heavily liable if for some reason Steam shut down, they had to make something unavailable for some reason, whatever.

        • @Jako301@feddit.de
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          11 year ago

          You never owned any software, even before valve. All you ever purchased was a license key that could be revoked at any time.

          That isn’t a problem made by valve, it existed far before the whole company was even founded. The underlying issue is the way digital mediums are licensed and the corresponding copyright laws.

        • @CountVon@sh.itjust.works
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          I’m not convinced that Valve will go down the tubes when Gabe shuffles off this moral coil (praise gaben may he live a thousand years). It would require a strong company culture that believes as he does that piracy is a service issue and is thus willing to adhere to his vision in his absence, but that can happen in a privately held company if there’s a strong succession plan in place.

          Now, if Gabe dies and Valve goes public, then it’s pretty much over. Platform monetization, proft-taking and short-term thinking would enshittify Steam in short order.

      • @uis@lemmy.world
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        01 year ago

        since the alternative is being kicked out at 18 without anywhere to go or money.

        More like socialism. Valve is privately owmed company that is run like half-company half-coop.

        • @giggling_engine@lemmy.world
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          11 year ago

          This.

          Their strength comes from having zero management and all projects are born and lead by the devs themselves. As close to communism as you could get in a capitalistic world. It does come with some problems but they’re totally manageable - like having a strictly homogeneous workforce (which, one could argue, isn’t a bad thing)

    • @theangryseal@lemmy.world
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      191 year ago

      It’s funny. I’m dirt poor and I really want to play The Last of Us again. I could easily download it and get it going through piracy. Heck, it’s crossed my mind a time or two.

      But you know what I’m doing? I’m waiting for it to go on sale and I’ll grab it then if the time is right. If not I’ll wait until it is.

      I have plenty to do until then.

      It’s definitely a service issue. I haven’t pirated a single game on Steam Deck.

  • Neshura
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    571 year ago

    I actually bought some games on Steam I already owned on other launchers because while I could set them up via Lutris or the like just hitting “Play” is so much easier it’s unreal. Valve is doing so much to make Linux game as comfortable as possible I don’t even remotely consider buying from anyone else because there it’s a pain in the ass just to get the game running once, never mind keeping it running through updates

    • ChrisFhey
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      161 year ago

      Not to mention keeping game saves in sync. I’m experimenting with syncthing for my pirated games, but I have to admit that just getting the Steam version sounds much more sensible now that I’ve my Steam deck.

      • @spaceaape@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        I use syncthing for my emulator savestates between retroarch on my deck and retroarch on my android tv(no steam client or steam cloud sync for android or android tv), no matter where i decide to play I always have my most recent save. It also has versioning so i can go back to older versions of saves. I use a virtual private server(or seedbox) running syncthing as the in-between cloud host.

        I wrote up a guide on how to do it in the Steam Retroarch community guides. It shouldn’t be much different for PC game saves, just choosing a different folder, specifically the one with your chosen files.

  • @hierophant_nihilant@reddthat.com
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    281 year ago

    Well, I stopped pirating games a long ago because of steam, because of how good it was/is as a service and low prices. I don’t think any game publisher should cry about steam prices, because when the AAA game is just released and for a full price, millions of FOMOs run to buy it. And I can wait and see if it’s worth it.

  • @just_another_person@lemmy.world
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    191 year ago

    Interesting take, for sure. I agree to some point. I also think Gabe just knows the audience, and he knows how much people would have rebelled against the very idea of this device if it came from Steam (not Valve), and excluded users. This would have been a completely failed product had the initial reviews been something like “Just a Switch knockoff”.

    Instead, this has garnered Steam as a platform with an entire group of adoring fans, some of whom used to be critics. I guarantee they added a ton of business to Steam as a platform just because a lot of users would buy, say, GTA5 on Steam again during a sale for $9 versus jumping through the tiny hoops to make a bootleg copy run.

    They did a fantastic job in parallelism getting Proton to an easy to use product (for free, mind you), and reinventing the portable PC game. Many may not know that was an entire segment of handheld PC devices on the market for years before Deck hit, and Steam’s team hit all the right spots to completely blow them away, and not only make them irrelevant, but also lure in new adoptees to Steam as a platform. Brilliant execution and moves.

    • @variants@possumpat.io
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      31 year ago

      man I remember using a 8" windows tablet with a 3d printed mount to a xbox controller to be able to play steam games like hyperlight drifter, it was so cool at the time but man did it suck holding it for long and the performance was so bad for anything but the simplest game. after that I turned to steam link with my phone and a razer kishi controller, I setup a headless steam docker on my server to keep my games accessible and that worked pretty well when 5G came out but nothing really beats games running on the hardware you hold in your hand, at least not for a good while

  • @PopOfAfrica@lemmy.world
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    181 year ago

    I literally stopped playing my pirated copy of Spider-Man Remastered to play an official copy on the Steam Deck because it was on sale.

  • Flax
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    1 year ago

    Speaking of services, I wonder how much piracy would go down if Netflix and Disney Plus and such would let you rent a film or episode at £0.50-£2 at a time for 24 hours, like how Google Play used to let you. That way if you don’t own one of the subscriptions, you can still watch by paying pocket change. Or watch unlimited by paying the monthly fee.

  • ѕєχυαℓ ρσℓутσρє
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    91 year ago

    Games are one of the very few things that I always pay for. Steam is mostly responsible for that. Also, music. But nowadays I do store some of my own music because I can have lossless that way.

  • ReCursing
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    91 year ago

    I buy most of my games on steam simply because it makes running them on Linux so damn easy, and I remember the bad old days when it was hell!

    • Neshura
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      31 year ago

      By now Steam’s most loyal userbase is probably the Linux Gaming community because they make it so easy to just play the games, not to mention the QoL improvements they contribute to upstream projects

  • @cordlesslamp@lemmy.today
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    1 year ago

    Don’t even need Steam deck. The Steam store has put an end to my pirate life over a decade ago.

    On multiple occasions, I have found myself rather wait for sale and bought a game on Steam, than receive it for free on Epic store.

    I put every single games that I have ever pirated in Steam’s wishlist (if it’s available). Then slowly buying them one by one when they goes on sale. I’m not rich by any means and it’s the least I can do.

    • Cethin
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      11 year ago

      It mostly stopped piracy for me, but occasionally I’ll want to try a game but not want to support the company, or try a game I know I’ll hate just to see what they did.

      I also pirated Starfield, which I technically had access to through GamePass, but it couldn’t be modded. (I also ended up hating it too.) I’ll probably be canceling GamePass though since I’ve switched to 100% Linux since then, and Windows has made it impossible to use with Linux.

        • Cethin
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          11 year ago

          Yeah, so like everyone else has said, generally yes. There are occasionally issues, but the only issues I’ve had so far (that see actually issues with the game running and not anti-cheat that just blocks Linux) have been solved by fixes I found on ProtonDB.

          Apparently, on average, games actually run even better on Linux. This is due to the combination of a less bloated OS, but also because proton is translating DirectX into Vulkan, and doing it a smart way such that it’s actually more efficient usually. So far, it’s only GamePass and those few multiplayer games that have fallen short.

          • @seaturtle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            01 year ago

            Do you happen to know how well this works for old Windows games? We’re talking about random indie things that run in little windows and are native to like Win98. A good lotta old doujin games are like this.

            • Cethin
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              I tried Commandos (released in 1998) the other day. It worked nearly flawlessly. I still needed to set my bottle (application for running wine/proton with presets) to run in an older version of Windows compatibility mode I think, but you need to do that in Windows probably too.

              (You do need a fan patch to make it run at modern resolutions, but that’s not required, and it’s needed for windows too.)

        • @tux@lemmy.world
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          11 year ago

          Super broad generalization, yes.

          That’s one of the biggest things valve has contributed to for the Linux community, unshitifying gaming on Linux. Proton does an amazingly good job at working on most games. And steam does a great job of making it easier to use proton.

          Now there are always a few problem games, mainly ones that use some crazy kernel level anti-cheat (that doesn’t work anyways). But if you’re curious look at https://www.protondb.com/

  • Sterben
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    71 year ago

    I generally always buy games, because they are kinda cheap on PC, but I still refuse to pay streaming services to watch movies.

    Steam Deck is great for consuming movies / TV series.

    • @EatYouWell@lemmy.world
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      71 year ago

      Every game I’ve pirated I eventually purchased, but I stopped when steam had their 2h playtime return window.

    • @Whirlybird@aussie.zone
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      11 year ago

      I can’t think of a worse mobile device to use for movie/tv watching than a steam deck 😂. Your phone would be much better.

  • @filister@lemmy.world
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    51 year ago

    At the end it’s all about convenience and how much you need to tinker with something, because your free time also matters and if the effort to pirate something is higher than the price of that something then you are more likely to choose convenience. Same with Netflix.

  • @trash80@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 year ago

    It’s 100% possible to put pirated games on the Switch Steam Deck - in fact, it’s as easy as it could reasonably be.

    Hacking or cracking DRM takes time, but it doesn’t present a real obstacle for pirates to overcome.

    • Hildegarde
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      81 year ago

      From context I get the impression that was a mistake and OP wrote Switch when they meant Deck. The rest of the paragraph seems to have pretty deck specific information.

  • BlinkerFluid
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    51 year ago

    Here’s my piracy shtick.

    I beat half of Blasphemous on a pirated copy then I bought it, moved the save file and kept playing.

    Criteria: I like the game. I’ll probably play it again in ten years and I want to support the devs.

    What would’ve happened if I never pirated it? I’d be saying the same thing about someone else’s game.

    • pgetsos
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      21 year ago

      I pretty much do the same for almost a decade whenever a game doesn’t have a demo available