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It seems obvious that the distinction between buying a game digitally and buying a license to play a game digitally could be confusing to the average person looking at a digital storefront. Are you being facetious? (honestly asking - like, "gee, who would have thought there could be confusion?")



A lot of Steam customers simply haven't thought very far ahead: what happens when they die? As a twenty-year old company there is certainly a reckoning on the horizon as their users age-out and start passing in higher numbers.

What happens when Gabe Newell dies is another very important question that adds some urgency - one or two decades - to establishing more balanced policies.


Steam says they won't pass the library to heirs, but steam will do whatever the probate judge tells them to.


Steam has never offered offline installers. And even offline play requires you to be online for offline to work for a period of time before being online again. If the service disappears so does your catalog.

I thought it was common knowledge you’re only buying a license to play via steam. You never own the game outright forever.




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