Tower Unite [Steam], a 'community-based virtual world party game' had a Linux version that was left in Beta since 2016 and eventually it broke. They've now removed it in favour of people using Valve's Steam Play.
Back in September, a user asked the developer PixelTail Games to actually remove the Linux version. They didn't do it then, mentioning the fact that they would have to delete the Linux content since you can't pick between Steam Play and a Linux version but things have changed.
In a post on their official forum, they stated that a few months ago they made some changes to their engine, which broke the Linux beta. For them Linux "wasn’t the highest of priority" and so it sat there doing nothing.
In a follow up post, they directly blamed Epic Games stating that "Unfortunately Epic doesn’t really support Linux all that well, as it was their change to the engine that broke it in the first place."—ouch.
I find it interesting, as Steam Play obviously makes it a lot easier for developers to drop support entirely for our small platform. However, in this case they were very clear even from the start of the Linux beta back in 2016, that Linux simply wasn't a priority and it seems it never became one.
What are your thoughts?
Not totally fair, I know, but still. It's a generic application, a translator, nothing custom to make it work at all.
Quoting: NeoTheFoxIt's the principle of the thing. I bought a native Linux game. I no longer have access to what I paid for. It was simply taken away from me. I buy games in order to play them with Wine / Proton "all the time", but at my discretion. I think it's fundamentally unfair to put a customer in a situation where what they have is so far removed from what it was advertized as at the time of purchase that it doesn't work (or isn't officially supported) on the platform it was bought on and for. Can you imagine buying a PlayStation game which suddenly stops working one day and the developers just going "eh, pretty sure you can still play it on an Xbox, good luck kid lol"? Can you imagine Sony letting that slide? Heck, can you imagine some big game on Steam suddenly completely dropping Windows support and there not being an absolute uproar and an avalanche of refund requests? And I think the playtime argument is completely beside the point. I didn't get bored of the game after those 20 hours. When I was paying for it I didn't know I'm paying for a temporary offer that can just disappear for arbitrary reasons. If developers are cutting access to the things that somebody paid for, they should (ideally at least, from a moral perspective) bear the cost. Perhaps they could let the engine developers know about those costs, too.Quoting: qptain NemoMy refund request has been denied based on the playtime (20 hours).
Well sure thing it was denied, 20 hours is more than enough for what the game costs anyway, and don't shy away from Proton, it works really well. I've been getting games left and right for it, it's amazing. I mean, I am 100% with the developer here - if they can't fix the engine to have good performance on Linux and Proton does it better anyway - why should you care how "native" is it?
Quoting: GuestAgreed. You pay for the Linux Version. They remove it? Refund. That should be allowed. Maybe Valve should add something like that to the Refund Policy like: If the Developer drops the Platform Support you can refund even when you played it way longer than those 2 Hours and 14 Days after Purchase. Like yeah the port was bad and Proton is a thing. But still. Thats why Proton is Good AND Bad. Bad because: why bother with Supporting and making a Working Port when Proton does the job?
But its also Epics fault for not having a proper Linux Support for their Engine. So you cant blame the Dev alone. But still.
is it really helping, if you can refund games even after 20h playtime
sounds for me like troubles and risks i better dont take next time i make a game
Quoting: qptain NemoQuoting: NeoTheFoxIt's the principle of the thing. I bought a native Linux game. I no longer have access to what I paid for. It was simply taken away from me. I buy games in order to play them with Wine / Proton "all the time", but at my discretion. I think it's fundamentally unfair to put a customer in a situation where what they have is so far removed from what it was advertized as at the time of purchase that it doesn't work (or isn't officially supported) on the platform it was bought on and for.Quoting: qptain NemoMy refund request has been denied based on the playtime (20 hours).
Well sure thing it was denied, 20 hours is more than enough for what the game costs anyway, and don't shy away from Proton, it works really well. I've been getting games left and right for it, it's amazing. I mean, I am 100% with the developer here - if they can't fix the engine to have good performance on Linux and Proton does it better anyway - why should you care how "native" is it?
They never advertised Linux support, on forums they stressed that the beta is experimental, and they never put SteamOS logo on their store page.
Quoting: NeoTheFoxIf that's the case, I might be in the wrong.Quoting: qptain NemoQuoting: NeoTheFoxIt's the principle of the thing. I bought a native Linux game. I no longer have access to what I paid for. It was simply taken away from me. I buy games in order to play them with Wine / Proton "all the time", but at my discretion. I think it's fundamentally unfair to put a customer in a situation where what they have is so far removed from what it was advertized as at the time of purchase that it doesn't work (or isn't officially supported) on the platform it was bought on and for.Quoting: qptain NemoMy refund request has been denied based on the playtime (20 hours).
Well sure thing it was denied, 20 hours is more than enough for what the game costs anyway, and don't shy away from Proton, it works really well. I've been getting games left and right for it, it's amazing. I mean, I am 100% with the developer here - if they can't fix the engine to have good performance on Linux and Proton does it better anyway - why should you care how "native" is it?
They never advertised Linux support, on forums they stressed that the beta is experimental, and they never put SteamOS logo on their store page.
Quoting: qptain NemoWhen I was paying for it I didn't know I'm paying for a temporary offer that can just disappear for arbitrary reasons.Well that's every game on Steam and several other online platforms. You buy licenses, not products. There are many ways those licenses can become useless or inoperative for you. I believe Steam's terms of service are sufficiently clear about this.
As for buying a Linux game, Steam sells cross-platform licenses. That's what the name Steam Play originally referred to: you buy it once, play it on any available OS. Those other parts of your license are still functional, so frustration aside I can't really expect Steam to have liability to you in this instance. It would be great customer service to refund you anyway, but I wouldn't try to take them to court over this. It might make more sense to ask a refund from the dev/publisher instead.
Quoting: qptain NemoIt's the principle of the thing. I bought a native Linux game.Sorry, but no, you have not. It is a subscription, not a purchase.
And yes, "VALVE AND ITS AFFILIATES AND SERVICE PROVIDERS", as stated in the Steam Subscriber Agreement, provide services "AS IS" … "WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND".
Sad, but true. At least, in case of DRM-free stores you could keep your local copy. No such luck with Steam. :(
QuoteNo Brakes Games
Thing Trunk
Snapshot Games
Transhuman Design
Eric Lengyel
Redbeet Interactive
Facepunch
Stoic
PixelTail
Quoting: GustyGhostecho "PixelTail" >> ~/List_of_cancer_developers.txt
QuoteNo Brakes Games
Thing Trunk
Snapshot Games
Transhuman Design
Eric Lengyel
Redbeet Interactive
Facepunch
Stoic
PixelTail
Sorry, in this case, I do think it should be EPIC added to the list.
Quoting: SalvatosQuoting: qptain NemoWhen I was paying for it I didn't know I'm paying for a temporary offer that can just disappear for arbitrary reasons.Well that's every game on Steam and several other online platforms. You buy licenses, not products. There are many ways those licenses can become useless or inoperative for you. I believe Steam's terms of service are sufficiently clear about this.
As for buying a Linux game, Steam sells cross-platform licenses. That's what the name Steam Play originally referred to: you buy it once, play it on any available OS. Those other parts of your license are still functional, so frustration aside I can't really expect Steam to have liability to you in this instance. It would be great customer service to refund you anyway, but I wouldn't try to take them to court over this. It might make more sense to ask a refund from the dev/publisher instead.
Quoting: Alm888Quoting: qptain NemoIt's the principle of the thing. I bought a native Linux game.Sorry, but no, you have not. It is a subscription, not a purchase.
And yes, "VALVE AND ITS AFFILIATES AND SERVICE PROVIDERS", as stated in the Steam Subscriber Agreement, provide services "AS IS" … "WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND".
Quoting: GuestIf it wasn’t clear enough, the Steam subscriber agreement also says: "Valve may cancel your Account or any particular Subscription(s) at any time in the event that (a) Valve ceases providing such Subscriptions to similarly situated Subscribers generally".That's fair enough. But there is a difference between "is legal" and "is a good idea". I absolutely don't mind Valve covering their ass and making it so they can just do it if it's necessary. How they actually behave in real scenarios is what matters. You, i.e. an average Steam customer, don't expect to randomly lose access to your Steam games all the time. If you did, you wouldn't ever buy anything on Steam, simple as that. Their entire business is built on the assumption that this wouldn't happen 99.9% of the time regardless of whether they're allowed to or not. So I think it's accurate to assert that it's in Valve's interest to maintain that assumption, that this ideal of the customer never losing access to what they paid for is a factor.
So if they want to remove access to a game from everyone, they can.
But I'm compelled by what NeoTheFox said, which is as far as I remember is true. If they actually were clear about how experimental the support was and didn't mark their product as supporting Linux, I knew what I was agreeing to and so this is largely fair, even if disappointing. And in general I agree with the sentiment that less hostility we exhibit towards developers, the less problems down the road we're associated with, the better. I just thought that this kind of bait and switch was a good battle to pick, as something purely about responsibility for decisions. (Also I'll be honest I felt really disappointed and emotionally justified about getting something back for this letdown)
Quoting: Alm888Sad, but true. At least, in case of DRM-free stores you could keep your local copy. No such luck with Steam. :(I just can't resist pointing out that in this particular case that wouldn't help much as Tower Unite is the most multiplayer-only game imaginable. :D
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