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We All Have Steam Libraries. What Happens When They're Gone?

5 points| Skullfurious | 21 days ago

I feel like a lot of discussion on this topic comes down to apathy or just giving up. People say they'd start pirating their entire library if Steam ever went down, but that feels like more of a knee-jerk reaction than an actual plan. For Steam to simply cease existing, something critical would have to fail on a worldwide scale. It's not a realistic near-term scenario to be clear but I just wanted to talk about it and see how other people feel about it.

Even if you wanted to preserve your library, many people's collections have outgrown any commonly available consumer storage. We're talking libraries that would require multiple terabytes, maybe even tens of terabytes, to archive completely. The infrastructure to back that up isn't cheap or simple. So the "I'll just pirate it all" response starts to feel hollow when you think about the actual logistics.

To me this raises an uncomfortable question: what was the point of accumulating all those games in the first place? How many people have libraries packed with Humble Bundle extras, impulse buys from Steam sales, and games they swore they'd play someday but never touched? Just note that I'm guilty of this too.

I've spent a lot building a half decent gaming collection but a huge chunk of it sits there gathering dust.

So when the hypothetical happens and your library becomes inaccessible, how do you rationalize it? Will you actually miss most of those games, or will you realize you only ever cared about a handful?

Will you seek out a new platform to start buying from?

I have a slight shift in perspective now that buying games and never playing them is essentially a 30% donation to keeping Steam existing, and a 70% donation to the developers / publishers to keep doing what they are doing.

When you rationalize it like that it feels a bit less painful but I'm curious what HN's take on this topic is.

3 comments

order

chasing0entropy|21 days ago

The plan is make hoarding data(including games) your hobby. There is no need to wait until your imaginary game archive is inaccessible; start buying hard drives now. With modern day ZFS/NAS technology there's no reason not to have at least a couple terabytes to backup your favorite games.

rumpelstiel|21 days ago

thats why i usw gog and download the backup files to ma chunk drive. If Steam decides to block the game, even if you have the backup files, it might not start because auf the steam integration. It never happened to me, but as a possible scenario. I also use cachyos with heroic loader, at least my epic games are safe, as when they are sideloaded, i backup the wine/game folders from time to time (only the games i liked), and my epic library is so huge, because of the free games, i cant play all of them anyway. Also thr steam/humblebundle shit yes omg.. i have over 2500 games not played, not counting my emustation library (where i have all top 100 games for pretty much all famous consoles gb,gbc, n64, saturn, wii, psx, ps2,.. and a a few more)

khedoros1|21 days ago

I definitely only care about a handful. I've got categories like "beaten", "in-progress", "maybe someday", and "meh". You accumulate a lot of free stuff over the years, things you got because they were in a cheap bundle with what you wanted, the thing you bought to play with a friend and did exactly once, etc.

GOG's similar. I've got so many things that I bought for $0.80, got for free, or bought for the memories and haven't actually picked up.

That's just on PC. I have a lot of physical media for a lot of different game systems. I think I'd probably have enough games on hand for the rest of my life if Steam and GOG both disappeared tomorrow.