

The Epic Games Store is slick but it lacks much of what makes Steam so appealing in many ways, it's just a fledgling shop, a work in progress, and now if we want to play The Division 2 or Metro: Exodus or Hades or any number of other games (surely the list will grow) we'll be forced to do so on EGS instead of Steam. In this sense, Valve is correct to say that it's unfair to customers, and especially so in the case of Metro: Exodus given that pre-orders were already open on Steam.
#MY DISNEY KITCHEN GAME STEAM PC#
Why wouldn't they with such a great cut? But making those titles exclusive restricts consumers' choice, forcing them onto a PC gaming store they may not want to be on for any number of reasons, from pricing to feature sets. By all means, try to get publishers to release their games on your store.

It may have a monopoly, but at least that monopoly has remained fairly consumer-friendly over the years.Ĭompetition is almost always good, of course, but I'm not a fan of Epic's strategy in the slightest.
#MY DISNEY KITCHEN GAME STEAM FREE#
More open, more free than the closed ecosystems of consoles. In many ways, Steam is emblematic of the Wild West that is PC gaming. It's a platform that many have rightly criticized for its abundance of shovelware, but it's also a platform that refrains from censorship (most of the time) and gives gamers access to a huge catalog of games. Before EA took its ball home and made Origin and Activision started migrating over to Blizzard's, Steam was a place you could find just about every game. We all play on PCs the only difference is how powerful our rigs are.
