So does this mean they are dropping all the restrictions on sexual content or is it just going back to where it was originally?
So does this mean they are dropping all the restrictions on sexual content or is it just going back to where it was originally?
It's a terrible idea, if you ask me. Quality control is a necessity. The first major bust for the gaming industry was a flood of stupid as shit, low quality games.
Gamers are all the way for no censorship in games. Until they see a woman in a game that they don't approve of and then the shit hits the fan.
Ahahaha, exactly.
Bunch of whiny little buggers, these shits.
Good response from Valve. The market can decide for itself. The trash games will continue to get buried, and good, fun and well designed games will continue to flourish as they have done before.
Oh lad, the market is never to be fully trusted. Only a naive idiot believes the market can "decide for itself". Regulation and quality control are like the clippers you use to trim away dead leaves or branches. The tool you use to remove weeds from your damn garden.
The trash games will bury quality games, forcing you to exert effort. Maybe you're the kinda guy who is willing to waste hours sifting through the refuse but most people aren't. Good games will, without good coverage or word of mouth, be washed away.
@AncientDozer: You're being melodramatic. Simply take 5 minutes every day or every other day to see all the new games that release. You won't miss anything.
I support what Valve is doing. I hate censorship, and I really don't mind all the trash that does get released on Steam.
@AncientDozer: Good content will receive word of mouth and coverage as they have done in the past. The home page of steam and similar stores can still highlight quality content. Recommendation algorithms based on play time and purchase history are getting more sophisticated.
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