• Dojan
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    24910 months ago

    Lmao. I’ve no love for Apple, and even less for Epic. It’s like two grotesquely unlovable toddlers are throwing a hissy fit in their little sandbox and I’m here for it.

    • @Buffalox@lemmy.world
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      14110 months ago

      Yes, it’s kind of funny with Epic complaining about fairness, when they arrange exclusivity agreements for their own game store. 🤪 And they actively sabotage it working on Linux.🤔

      • deweydecibel
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        10 months ago

        Regardless of the irony, someone needed to start this fight with Apple, so it might as well be them.

        Between the two of them, I’m not willing to “support” either, but I’m slightly more inclined to hope Epic comes out on top because they’re not also in a hardware dominance position. Epic can be as shitty as it likes about certain platforms, but they at least can only affect their games. They aren’t gatekeepers to a massive audience of users, and by far one of the largest gates at that. The Epic store actually has competition.

        Between an abusive developer and an abusive gatekeeper, the gatekeeper is the bigger issue.

      • Cethin
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        1010 months ago

        Ok, I really don’t get Epic hate. Sure, they’re using shitty practices to attempt to compete with the megolith Valve is, and it sucks. However, how are they sabotaging it working on Linux. They made Easy Anti-cheat work on Linux, which is huge, and also UE5 seems to run better on Linux than Windows by most accounts I’ve heard, including my own experience.

        Make reasonable complaints all day, but sabotaging Linux compatability is not something they’re doing.

        • @Giooschi@lemmy.world
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          1310 months ago

          However, how are they sabotaging it working on Linux.

          For example they discontinued support for Rocket League on Linux (and Mac) after buying Psyonix.

          • Cethin
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            10 months ago

            It’s got a platinum rating on ProtonDB. It looks like the native versions aren’t being supported anymore, but they still work. I don’t blame them. The game has gotten a lot smaller over the years and I’m certain there’s very few Linux players on it. Regardless, the Windows application seems to work perfectly fine for Linux users. Yeah, native is ideal but it costs extra money to maintain two (or three) versions.

            Anyway, you can’t say they’re sabotaging Linux support when they also purchased EAC and had them add Linux support. They may not be perfect with Linux, but they aren’t sabotaging it.

            Edit: Why is this being downvoted? If you want to downvote you should be able to articulate why. What is the expectation for them to do? The game has clearly been on the decline for a while, and I’m sure they’ve got the numbers for their player counts by system. They have limited money and need to support the game still. Why would they waste it on supporting a native Linux version if it isn’t being played and the windows version works perfectly on Linux? If they didn’t want Linux to exist, why would they make EAC work on Linux? Explain how you think they’re actively trying to harm Linux (sabotage) instead of merely maybe hurting it as a side effect passively.

        • @TwilightVulpine@lemmy.world
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          510 months ago

          Ok, I really don’t get Epic hate. Sure, they’re using shitty practices to attempt to compete with the megolith Valve is, and it sucks.

          Meanwhile GOG attempts to compete by offering features that other platforms don’t offer, like DRM-free installers and a multi-platform game launcher.

          If Epic got to #1 place, what guarantees there are that they would stop using exclusivity deals to hinder their own competitors? It might just be that we end up with a more anti-competititve market leader, and then what would be the benefit of having overtaken Steam?

          • Cethin
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            010 months ago

            I like GoG. They don’t hold any control over the market though. I wish they did, but they aren’t competing.

            • @TwilightVulpine@lemmy.world
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              110 months ago

              I can agree that GoG doesn’t have a large share of the market, but I’m still unconvinced of the benefit of this call for competition for competition’s sake when it’s introducing anti-competitive practices. Usually we want competition to push back against anti-competitive practices.

              • Cethin
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                110 months ago

                Epic takes less revenue than Steam.

                They both have anti-competitive practices. They’re just different practices. Epic tends to favor helping developers and Valve tends to favor appealing to users. Valve doesn’t need to force exclusivity because games have to take a loss to not use them, because they’re already the market leader. There’s no knowing what Valve would be doing if they were the underdog, but people need to stop assuming Valve is good. No company is ever good.

                • @TwilightVulpine@lemmy.world
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                  110 months ago

                  No company is good but that doesn’t mean they are all equally, identically bad.

                  We have seen what Valve did when it was not the market leader because it didn’t spawn in such a place. What they did is lock their own games to their own platform, which is something most other PC storefronts do or did at some point.

                  We did not yet see what Epic would do if it would got to the top. Is it even guaranteed that they would continue to take less revenue?

                  And really, if all companies are bad, what’s the point of rooting for Epic to overtake Steam?

                  • Cethin
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                    110 months ago

                    I’m not rooting for epic to overtake steam. I’m just against the people who hate Epic just for the sake of hating Epic. It’s cool to hate them I guess, but it doesn’t usually make sense. The biggest real issue is their store client sucks, but Steam wasn’t always as good as it is now either.

        • @Chocrates@lemmy.world
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          310 months ago

          Tim Sweeney is pretty openly against any Linux support for some reason so I think that soured Linux gamers against them.
          I have been gaming on Linux for 15 years and it is so much better these days, but we are still not a 1st party target. I get why, but it sucks to be ignored and told to just deal with it forever. I spend as much or more on hardware and software than windows gamers (except for a Windows license I suppose) and I guess I have to vote with my wallet.

        • @redcalcium@lemmy.institute
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          10 months ago

          Epic (the game engine and middleware developer) and Epic Store (the one that sells games) seems to have different priorities. Customers of Epic game engines and middlewares want linux supports, so they provide it. Meanwhile, Epic Store don’t want the burden of maintaining linux ports for their games, so they remove supports for linux in games they acquired.

    • @Hubi@feddit.de
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      4610 months ago

      The only sad thing about this is that only one of them can lose the lawsuit.

      • @Hadriscus@lemm.ee
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        10 months ago

        fabulous amphibian feeling its organ ? fat alluring fungiform obelisk ?

        (I will look this up, it’s just a good opportunity to practice my English)

        • @stoly@lemmy.world
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          710 months ago

          Fuck around and find out.

          Basically a vulgar way to say that if you do something very stupid, don’t be surprised when something bad happens.

          • @Land_Strider@lemmy.world
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            -510 months ago

            Very vulgar and tbh very beaten, redneck level childish expression mostly used overtly in bullshit reactions with almost zero regard to the context.

            • @FryHyde@lemmy.zip
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              110 months ago

              I mean yeah it’s mostly used by meatheads who get excited that somebody got punched, regardless of context…but I’m not exactly clutching my pearls at the use of a gasp bad word.

              • @Land_Strider@lemmy.world
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                110 months ago

                Dunno why that got down voted even though it agrees with and elaborates on the comment I replied to.

                It is just a statement. I didn’t even urge, encourage or request anybody to stop using that, so not even pressing on the toes of anybody except really insecure people like the other commenter on your level.

                Hell, it is used by those insecure people who can’t handle a criticism about their beliefs, usually in context where the subject is women, minorities, people living difficult lives, people enjoying crazy shit harming no one (else), rebellious populations that are directly or indirectly fucked by the colonialism.and fight back with whatever they have, even if it looks primitive in the face of their adversaries firepower.

                And here I am making just one criticism about the use of a word that has almost become the Reddit’s “this” in Lemmy political environments, and I’m the one clutching pearls or being insecure.

      • @AA5B@lemmy.world
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        010 months ago

        No kidding. As “that guy” who is siding with Apple on this …… seems like they’re playing with fire

    • @ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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      610 months ago

      By their own quote of the law, there’s no wording that would stipulate that apple has to allow epic to have their third party app in apples app store. Just that they would have to essentially allow it to be side loaded, or installable in some way onto the phone.

      But really, why should and app store have to foot the server bill for another company to get to install an app intended to make money while giving none to the company that owns and operates an app store?

      I sure as hell wouldn’t.

      • @GekkoState
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        3710 months ago

        Did you read the article?

        1. Epic is not trying to get their 3rd party app in apples app store.
        2. Epic can’t create a 3rd party app store because Apple revoked their developer license. This means any app epic creates can’t be sideloaded because it will never be signed by apple.
        3. Apples new rules require any 3rd party app store to pay apple $0.50 per install (there is no million app install requirement for 3rd party app stores). So apple would still make money off epics app store if they allowed it.
    • @tsonfeir@lemm.ee
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      10 months ago

      Out of curiosity, what companies do you love?

      Edit: oddly unpopular question lol

      Edit2: a lot of people seem to think this question is a statement.

      • Bezier
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        10 months ago

        Probably none, but one can dislike some more than others.

      • @Aceticon@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        It’s pretty silly to love a company: they’re not human and behave as a sociopath would.

        To love a company (which is really just to love their brand) is just to be easilly influenced by marketing and having a tendency to simplify one’s view of the world down to labels to make it easier to mentally understand it - in consumer terms it means that when you’re making a purchase decision you can just take the mental shortcut in your decision of directly choosing the “loved” brand, rather than needing to evaluate products and their suitability for you to make an informed buying choice, which is cognitivelly more costly.

        While “brand love” is understandable and not abnormal, it’s not a quality but rather it’s just a pretty flawed cognitive shortcut that goes against making informed choices, so expecting it from others is like expecting that everybody has a specific mild character flaw.

        You do your thing - it’s your life and your money - just don’t think that others must share that same reductive way of making purchasing decisions.

        • @tsonfeir@lemm.ee
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          10 months ago

          Do my thing? What statement did you assume I was making by asking a question?

          • @Aceticon@lemmy.world
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            10 months ago

            Your question as formulated has the expectation that people must love some company.

            From that I assumed that you yourself “love” one or more companies and hence use “love” for companies in your purchasing decisions.

            My “do your thing” applies to you making purchasing decisions following “love” for companies. A different stating of the idea I was trying to pass in that sentence is: “You do your purchases guided by love for companies if that’s your way, just don’t think that others must share that same reductive way of making purchasing decisions.”

            • @tsonfeir@lemm.ee
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              010 months ago

              They said they “have no love for Apple,” which has the expectation that they must have “love” for another.

              I was simply asking them. (Not you)

              • @Aceticon@lemmy.world
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                10 months ago

                That expectation makes no logical sense.

                “Having no love for Apple” does not imply that one “must love some other company” because “loving no company” implies “having no love for Apple”.

                This is probably why you got the downvotes: there are plenty of people around whose relation to companies does not involve loving any of them and who don’t like it when others expect them to.

                Personally I neither downvoted nor upvoted your original post as I don’t really mind if you expect that since it’s quite a common way people behave in this day and age of Marketing-heavy Consumer Society and you’re not harming anybody by asking even if your ask carries an erroneous assumption.

                • @tsonfeir@lemm.ee
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                  010 months ago

                  I don’t really give a shit, I just thought it was an interesting response to a simple question. People love to get mad, and it’s fascinating.

      • @GBU_28@lemm.ee
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        410 months ago

        A company? None. Black diamond’s products I own? I love their products like close friends

      • Dojan
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        310 months ago

        I think that’s a fair question, but the answers you’ve gotten is accurate. I don’t really believe that there are any ”good” profit-driven companies.

        Technically companies are just entities and don’t really have any morals assigned to them, good or bad, but they become bad when their increasing strive for profit ends up hurting people. These people could be their workers (like all AAA gaming companies), their customers, or some more or less unrelated third party (like soda companies ruining water sources).

        Since the pandemic, landlord companies in my country have gotten incredibly greedy. They got a sudden massive cash infusion by increasing rents by an absurd amount, so each year since they’ve been asking for equally absurd amounts. Their CEOs are pocketing extreme sums, and then moan about how they don’t get enough money to keep the company afloat.

        They’re trying to circumvent decades of precedence in how rent negotiations work, and it’s threatening the living situation for millions of people. It’s just evil.