Be glad all you're out is $50 for one game. I've got several friends who are out hundreds of dollars for entire collections that are mated to Steam with no legal recourse but to get their banks involved. Messy stuff.
Arthmoor, I don't even know if you're trying to make a point sometimes, or you're just spouting the same argument because people might not have heard you the first time.
Ah, the age old retort for someone with no argument: Opponent is a racist/bigot. Cute. I more or less expected that.
I never called you a racist, I called you a bigot. From Wikipedia: "A bigot is a person obstinately or intolerantly devoted to his or her own opinions and prejudices, especially one exhibiting intolerance, and animosity toward those of differing beliefs." By definition, you are a bigot because you are obstinately devoted to the idea that Valve is an evil entity that desires nothing more than to screw you over at every possibility, and those who do like Steam (such as myself) are clearly misguided fools that you must seek to rectify on your crusade of righteousness. When someone attempts to pose a counter-argument, you simply state that they are wrong without giving a reason why. If you're going to say something, you could at least say something more than "cute" and wave your imaginary air of superiority in people's faces.
Great! So because you've had nothing but a rosy experience, you're fine with other people being screwed by an intrusive and ugly service that has no business even being used for a single player game. Love it.
Yes, I've had a rosy experience. I'm certainly going to praise Steam for that because I've had nothing but trouble with everything else. Was Games for Windows Live any better with Fallout 3? How about SecuRom for Mass Effect? If your physical disc gets scratched, what do you do? I know of no one who, at any point in their lives, have been screwed over by Valve, their Steam service, or through any association of that. Out of
30 million people, how many people found themselves at the wrong end of the stick? My bank once decided to put a hold on my finances, while I was visiting another country no less. I was once charged double for my electric bill due to a database error on their part, yet they told me I still needed to pay it or they'd shut me down. My World of Warcraft account was hacked by Chinese gold farmers, and it was closed. The point is, this is life. Crap happens. WoW isn't a bad game simply because I lost time, money, and a lot of characters. My electric company was clearly at fault for what they did, but I'm not about to form a flash mob and storm their offices demanding my 300 bucks back. People who find themselves banned from Steam are more often than not people who have tried to sell their accounts or buy other accounts. If that is not the case, then a call to Valve could easily fix the mess. It's not that hard.
You have a strangely short sighted view of the local economy then if you are leaping to the assumption that Gamestop and Wal-Mart are the only two places that sell games. Out here, you can find them in all the major retailers, but that's starting to change because Steam is encouraging the lazy to stop leaving their homes to go shopping. The fact is, the more this trend continues, the more likely it is that Steam will approach monopoly power. I for one do not wish to see this happen. Steam's downfall would be a major win for competition and free enterprise.
Gamestop is not a local business by any means. It is a multinational corporation that could care less for the communities they service. There
used to be more local stores nearby, but they have either gone out of business or have been purchased and turned into more Gamestops. Gamestop isn't the only place that sells games, but what other alternatives do I have? Walmart? Target? Best Buy? No one but Gamestop even buys back used games. And none of those can be considered local businesses. They stifle out local business more than Steam ever could, and I honestly can't believe you can make the argument that Walmart is good for local business. What Steam is doing is saving me from wasting the equivalent of 5 dollars in gas to drive to a store. I spend the equivalent of a new video game in gas every week because I have a long commute. I'm not going to drive if I can help it.
Also, I don't think you have any idea of the scope of a monopoly. I can certainly buy my PC games at many other retailers (without leaving my house even), and get them in boxed or digital form. Or, I could just not play PC games, because PC games aren't a market, they are a sub market of a market based on console, handheld, mobile, and online entertainment. The gaming market is a massive thing, and you seem a little paranoid if you think the big bad Steam monster is going to dominate all of it.