I can play 60%+ of games on Linux because Valve cares way more than anyone else.
Big Picture works great for a console like experience far better than anyone elses.
Valve Controller let's practically any game under the sun be couch & controller playable.
Remote Play, then Remote Play Together, now Remote Play Tablet blow everything else out of the water.
I'm sorry the you doesn't meet your high pop culture desires? It feels much less glossy-plastic & more direct to me than Epic. That's just me I guess. The thing is, that is way way way way down my list of concerns. Steam is a technical juggernaut. No one else is even playing. Steam is super under appreciated. The lack of mainstream highly visible overwhelming successes doesn't bother me. Steam is innovating at the edge in radical ways, & they are always always always trying to spread the love, not steal the sunshine.
Anyone who says Valve is resting on their laurels clearly hasn't tried Half Life: Alyx. They've sigularly pushed VR further than all the other games and experiences out there combined.
Agreed. As far as my household is concerned there are two relevant VR experiences: BeatSaber and Alyx. (Serious Sam of all games gets an honourable mention). We would not own a Quest if not for Alyx.
>Valve Controller let's practically any game under the sun be couch & controller playable.
The Steam Controller is dead.
>I can play 60%+ of games on Linux because Valve cares way more than anyone else.
Steam OS is dead. The open source community is more responsible for Linux gaming than Valve. Valve has supported Linux in the (hilariously) limited number of titles they've released in the last decade, and has added some support to the open source community. They are not the driver behind Linux gaming.
>Remote Play, then Remote Play Together, now Remote Play Tablet blow everything else out of the water.
Steam Link is no longer in production. Legitimately, have you ever tried other remote play alternatives? There is just no way you can say this with a straight face. The Valve apps are truly crap.
>Steam is a technical juggernaut. No one else is even playing. Steam is super under appreciated
What? This isn't a difficult problem to solve. There are a dozen game libraries similar to Steam that do the same job, but significantly better. The only thing Steam has going for it is the DRM stickiness that they acquired by being the only player in the PC space for so long.
>Steam is innovating at the edge in radical ways, & they are always always always trying to spread the love, not steal the sunshine.
Legitimately, tell me how they are innovating in "radical ways."
This is comically absurd take that is utterly divorced from reality. Half of what you mentioned to love about Valve is related to canceled or abandoned stuff.
> The open source community is more responsible for Linux gaming than Valve. Valve has supported Linux in the (hilariously) limited number of titles they've released in the last decade, and has added some support to the open source community. They are not the driver behind Linux gaming.
Valve are not the only ones doing anything for Linux gaming, but they are a pretty fucking big contributor:
- Releaseing Steam for Linux, which has encouraged many games to be ported. Yes, the Steam Consoles are cancelled (or on hold), but even the promise of a new market (and the convenience of not having to have a separate distribution channel for the Linux version of your game) has changed the Linux gaming landscape from a handful of titles to more games than anyone can play (depending on your tastes ofc).
- Employing/contracting people working on different parts of the Linux graphics stack (SDL,radv,dxvk,more).
- Developing Proton. I mostly play native games, but Proton has been huge for many. Yes, it's based on Wine (that is a good thing, NIH syndrome is way too common is bad) but Valve have improved the parts needed to get a good gaming experience and packaged it up in a nice way that is dead simple to use for anyone. Just click a button to play your Windows games.
- Lots of other small things. For example Valve's Plagman has been working on https://github.com/Plagman/gamescope which is godsent for thos of us with ultrawide monitors or other uncommon resolutions and aspect ratios that gamedevs like to pretend don't exist.
And best of all, most of those improvements have been open source and available even to those who don't want to use Steam. That's surprisingly open for what is esentially a DRM company. So saying "The open source community is more responsible for Linux gaming than Valve" doesn't even make sense when Valve are part of that opensource community.
Yikes. Posting like this will get you banned on HN, and we've already had to warn you about this multiple times. I'm not going to ban you right now because you've also posted good comments, but please use HN as intended going forward. That means thoughtful, substantive comments, curious conversation, and no more flamewars.
I've seen post flagged, but to my knowledge I've never seen an explanation or communication for why.
In this case, I agree fully. I was fed up arguing with someone who insists on being a downer at every turn & who recognizes no good-side, no upside, who denied every contribution blanketly. That doesn't excuse. Perhaps that kind of outburst does merit a lifetime ban forever & ever, but in my opinion, issuing a lifetime ban for this sort of thing is grossly immoral & radically intolerant. Yes, it is a mistake, yes it should be punished. But to exercise the death penalty in this case speaks extremely ill of moderation & process on the internet, not in any way unique to Hacker News, but in a manner we see pervasively & which is extremely damaging to us all.
I think you should re-assess your policies & system. I rarely even notice that my posts have been flagged. Moderation happens invisibly. I would like to see a way to view my flagged posts, so I can understand what is happening to my content. And so I can reflect better. Because right now, you've warning me that I've been warned before, but that does not process. Simply raising the fact that moderation has occurred is important, first step to making this moderation into feedback.
Second, this is the only time I can remember having any feedback to inform me. I appreciate that I was offered a grant here, that I did get feedback. My post on Larry Wall being made into fiat dictator of social media moderation was incredibly on target & hilarious, yet flagged. Ok? I don't get it.
But most of all, this threat to be banned: I find it grossly immoral that the threat of punishment online is forever. People should get banned for months, years, but banning people forever is absurd, vindictive, & cruel. I think you & all sites should seek a system that works for justice, to correct problems, to encourage behavior. This threat of being banned causes me pause, and I knew I was breaking the rules even without having read them in decades, but it also is just so disgusting, so vile, makes me so sad to be here. Living under the threat of the guillotine, feeling like the punishment is radically out of line, that screwing up is unforgivable: this is cruelty that makes me radically aware that these rules, they are judged by fiat & there is no system or process for enforcement, that I contribute here only under the pleasure of ya'll & that ya'll offer me nothing of my own. There should be a system for justice, because this threat feels unjust & it hurts.
Obviously, though, it shouldn't take moderators to tell you that comments like "Heavens you are a little bitch" and "You don't fucking deserve it you turd" are unacceptable.
People can trivially make a new account after getting banned, and frequently do, so I think words like "cruelty", "disgusting", "vile" and "guillotine" are a tad overwrought.
I can play 60%+ of games on Linux because Valve cares way more than anyone else.
Big Picture works great for a console like experience far better than anyone elses.
Valve Controller let's practically any game under the sun be couch & controller playable.
Remote Play, then Remote Play Together, now Remote Play Tablet blow everything else out of the water.
I'm sorry the you doesn't meet your high pop culture desires? It feels much less glossy-plastic & more direct to me than Epic. That's just me I guess. The thing is, that is way way way way down my list of concerns. Steam is a technical juggernaut. No one else is even playing. Steam is super under appreciated. The lack of mainstream highly visible overwhelming successes doesn't bother me. Steam is innovating at the edge in radical ways, & they are always always always trying to spread the love, not steal the sunshine.