this post was submitted on 17 Oct 2025
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I get your frustration, but Valve effectively prints money. They don't need to care that Linux makes up less than 3% of all users, and they aren't supporting it purely out of the goodness of their heart either, as they have direct incentive to do so through improving the Steam Deck.
Valve isn't spending money or time tracking down rights holders of games that can't legally be bought anymore. For all the good Valve does with Linux and Proton, there are games still being sold on Steam that simply do not work on modern machines. Steam leaves fixing that up to the devs.
We're also just going to ignore Valve's massive hand in popularizing the microtransaction laden lootbox hell? Team Fortress 2 has been an absolute money printer for them, and they've only brought that forward into all their other multiplayer games since, while doing nothing to curb all the gambling shit that has cropped up around things like CSGO skins. Or how about early access, never release "scams"?
I'm not convinced that any of that make Valve evil, but my point is that both of these companies aren't your friends.
GOG isn't just tossing stuff up on their storefront like Valve, they actively sort out how to get these games working on modern hardware and package it up in a way that is seamless for the average user. Unfortunately the average user is on Windows, and they don't have the microtransaction mountains of money to burn pursuing Linux right now. That sucks.
As far as deleting the wishlist items? They answered it already.
Most importantly, a public wishlist isn't a contract, and a company giving an answer you don't like doesn't make them evil.
I'm not happy about it, but this good vs evil, "this just shows the kind of company they are" shit is taking things pretty damn far.