• Counterstrike shenanigan

    From Spalls Hurgenson@21:1/5 to All on Fri Sep 29 12:02:37 2023
    "Counterstrike 2" has just been released. Hurrah, I suppose. But
    what's getting less mention is that Steam has killed its predecessor, "Counterstrike: GO". You can't buy it. You can't play it.** The
    servers are offline. You can't even pull up the old store page and
    read up about it. As far as Valve is concerned, the game is gone.

    Which, I mean, sounds just mean. Sure, Valve wants "Counterstrike 2"
    to be a success, and sure, "CS:GO" got years of free support, and,
    sure, "CS2" is really just an updated version of "CS:GO". Still, the
    original game has a huge and dedicated fan base - including many who
    have made actual careers out of playing the game - and to simply yank
    it offline is bad form. Not everybody wants the latest-n-greatest.
    Some of us are quite happy enjoying older games. Let us play both.
    Don't make the choice for us, Valve.

    Especially since CS2 isn't nearly as feature-complete as its older
    version and - according to reports - is a lot less optimized than
    CS:GO. For a game where the player base depends on high FPS for aiming
    and movement, the last strikes at the heart of CS gameplay. Of course,
    such problems are typical of modern games and are usually worked out
    over the course of a few months after release... but until then? It's
    not like the fans can play the old game until the new one is up to
    snuff.

    It's a shitty move and Valve should know better.






    ----------------
    * Apparently there is a hack to get the older game running, but it
    only works offline... so what's the point?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From candycanearter07@21:1/5 to Spalls Hurgenson on Fri Sep 29 17:17:04 2023
    On 9/29/23 11:02, Spalls Hurgenson wrote:

    "Counterstrike 2" has just been released. Hurrah, I suppose. But
    what's getting less mention is that Steam has killed its predecessor, "Counterstrike: GO". You can't buy it. You can't play it.** The
    servers are offline. You can't even pull up the old store page and
    read up about it. As far as Valve is concerned, the game is gone.

    Which, I mean, sounds just mean. Sure, Valve wants "Counterstrike 2"
    to be a success, and sure, "CS:GO" got years of free support, and,
    sure, "CS2" is really just an updated version of "CS:GO". Still, the
    original game has a huge and dedicated fan base - including many who
    have made actual careers out of playing the game - and to simply yank
    it offline is bad form. Not everybody wants the latest-n-greatest.
    Some of us are quite happy enjoying older games. Let us play both.
    Don't make the choice for us, Valve.

    Especially since CS2 isn't nearly as feature-complete as its older
    version and - according to reports - is a lot less optimized than
    CS:GO. For a game where the player base depends on high FPS for aiming
    and movement, the last strikes at the heart of CS gameplay. Of course,
    such problems are typical of modern games and are usually worked out
    over the course of a few months after release... but until then? It's
    not like the fans can play the old game until the new one is up to
    snuff.

    It's a shitty move and Valve should know better.






    ----------------
    * Apparently there is a hack to get the older game running, but it
    only works offline... so what's the point?



    They LITERALLY pulled an Overwatch 2. Incredible.
    not that i care that much about CS but still
    --
    user <candycane> is generated from /dev/urandom

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rin Stowleigh@21:1/5 to spallshurgenson@gmail.com on Fri Sep 29 18:40:54 2023
    On Fri, 29 Sep 2023 12:02:37 -0400, Spalls Hurgenson <spallshurgenson@gmail.com> wrote:

    [...]
    It's a shitty move and Valve should know better.

    ----------------
    * Apparently there is a hack to get the older game running, but it
    only works offline... so what's the point?


    I do get what you're saying, but one of the issues with new
    multiplayer games is that for it to succeed (and I don't mean from the perspective of those who profit from it, but from perspective of the
    player who expects hundreds or thousands of hours of addictive
    playtime), there can be a server population problem.

    A lot of the people that play these games are lazy, jobless gits that
    do nothing with their lives BUT play games... and the same things
    that make them failures at life are the same things that make them get
    addicted to a single game and never move past it....

    ....which in a way should be their right, but it comes at the expense
    of the more progressive gamers who enjoy a specific genre, but would
    like to play new variations within that genre and see things move
    forward a bit. The problem then becomes that of having enough online population for a NEW game to be enjoyable.. it's an issue of achieving
    critical mass. When that doesn't happen, you end up in underpopulated
    game servers (which often makes the game play different than intended
    and usually underwhelming, leaves the player spending more time in
    matchmaking lobbies than actually playing the game, or other adverse
    effects).

    There is a weird "pry it from my cold dead fingers" that seems to
    occur all too often in gaming, at least among the multiplayer crowd.
    That syndrome can make it harder for new games to succeed.

    I have no idea if this is behind Valve's reasoning, but if they put
    the lid on CS:GO just to ensure players migrated over to the new
    version, I totally get it, and for those that primarily play
    competitive MP games, they will ultimately get more enjoyment out of
    that way of doing things.

    FWIW I don't really have a dog specifically in the Counterstrike
    fight. I used to play a lot, but I haven't played any variation of it
    in years, and wasn't even aware of CS2 until I saw your post.

    But I've seen several factors mostly vaporize what the competitive
    multiplayer gaming landscape used to look like:

    1. Too many choices.. more server player population fragmentation
    from too many options. Which might be a good thing if it weren't for
    #2 and #3....
    2. Consolitis... Consoles lured away too many former PC players and
    became the point of entry for new gamers due to lower price point.
    This wasn't good for competitive MP PC gaming because it requires a
    mouse and keyboard, so only the rare few that were able to work well
    or gain critical mass with a controller could become popular (COD,
    etc).
    3. The influx of politics in games... Most of the guys I used to
    game online with cannot stand what's happened to gaming, thus have
    found other hobbies. Or maybe they still game but not at the same
    level, not AAA, and not buying new PC gear regularly. Because the
    next AAA title is probably going to force them to play the role of a
    trans snowflake kid with daddy issues or something, and that's not
    something they find very immersive. Specific cases aside, people are
    not oblivious when a game design tries to force beliefs down their
    throat, and for a lot of folks it turned them off of gaming and onto
    other hobbies permanently.

    So... I dunno... if CS2 does everything the old CS games did and does
    it well, maybe its a good thing. If it's not as optimized as CS:GO,
    then to me it's just a return to old school gaming, because once upon
    a time, it was not uncommon to install a game, realize it was a work
    of art but that it wasn't running very well due to outdated
    components. That was the impetus to upgrade the PC components, which
    helped fuel the PC industry and helped fuel PC gaming. The problem
    lately is that new games have just plain sucked, and it removes any
    motive to upgrade.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From H1MEM@21:1/5 to Spalls Hurgenson on Sat Sep 30 11:34:47 2023
    Spalls Hurgenson wrote:

    "Counterstrike 2" has just been released. Hurrah, I suppose. But
    what's getting less mention is that Steam has killed its predecessor, "Counterstrike: GO". You can't buy it. You can't play it.** The
    servers are offline. You can't even pull up the old store page and
    read up about it. As far as Valve is concerned, the game is gone.

    Yup. That's pretty much why nowadays I don't trust any Game as a
    Service. You just use a service they own, they can do whatever they
    want, and all this it's probably written in those long EULAs we
    forcefully accepted, the other option being nos using it.

    In the end, it's up to the community. Thankfully we still have Classic
    Team Fortress 2 without the hats and the graphical downgrade that came
    when the game went Free to Play, and we can play Counter-Strike 1.6 and Half-Life Deathmatch, and a lot of other great games that support LAN multiplayer and community servers outside of Steam where companies have
    no power over. Best of all: No gaudy looking player / weapon skins,
    other than the horrors we load ourselves.

    Sorry. After Destiny 2 I have been burned forever. I want my Red War
    single player campaign that I payed for, and I am not getting it back.
    Lessons were learned that day.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Spalls Hurgenson@21:1/5 to rstowleigh@x-nospam-x.com on Sat Sep 30 09:15:26 2023
    On Fri, 29 Sep 2023 18:40:54 -0400, Rin Stowleigh
    <rstowleigh@x-nospam-x.com> wrote:

    On Fri, 29 Sep 2023 12:02:37 -0400, Spalls Hurgenson ><spallshurgenson@gmail.com> wrote:

    [...]
    It's a shitty move and Valve should know better.

    ----------------
    * Apparently there is a hack to get the older game running, but it
    only works offline... so what's the point?


    A lot of the people that play these games are lazy, jobless gits that
    do nothing with their lives BUT play games... and the same things
    that make them failures at life are the same things that make them get >addicted to a single game and never move past it....

    Well, that's an interesting take...

    <snip>
    I dunno... if CS2 does everything the old CS games did and does
    it well, maybe its a good thing. If it's not as optimized as CS:GO,
    then to me it's just a return to old school gaming, because once upon
    a time, it was not uncommon to install a game, realize it was a work
    of art but that it wasn't running very well due to outdated
    components. That was the impetus to upgrade the PC components, which
    helped fuel the PC industry and helped fuel PC gaming. The problem
    lately is that new games have just plain sucked, and it removes any
    motive to upgrade.

    While that argument /may/ hold for some games, we're talking
    "Counter-Strike" here. It's not a game that's lacking in audience,
    interest, or resources from its developer. People /would/ have flocked
    to CS2 without Valve killing CS:GO. And if they didn't, it would have
    failed on its merits (you know, like if it were missing features)
    rather than because - gamers are 'lazy, jobless gits' who aren't
    slavering over every newest release because apparently that's they're
    duty as gamers. We saw this with previous Valve multiplayer games -
    "Left4Dead 2" and "TeamFortress 2" - where the sequel quickly
    superseded the original despite the originals remaining available to
    play. We see it with many other games too (a good chunk of
    Activision's profits depends on "Call of Duty" refreshes).

    Sure, there will always be some die-hards who remain with the older
    game. Sure, having the older game available will moderate the
    transition to the newer game. With smaller games, those losses /might/
    spell the doom for the newer which - unable to gain audience fast
    enough - never gets any traction in the market. But I can confidently
    say that wouldn't have been the case with "Counter-Strike 2".

    You'll not convince me that taking away a user's choice was in any way beneficial to the user. Take it off the market? Okay, sure. Make its
    store page less easy to find? Well, maybe. But take away a game people
    paid for (sure, they got a free copy of CS2 out of it, but CS2 is free
    for anyone, so that's not much of a swap)? Fuck you, Valve.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rin Stowleigh@21:1/5 to spallshurgenson@gmail.com on Sat Sep 30 10:12:03 2023
    On Sat, 30 Sep 2023 09:15:26 -0400, Spalls Hurgenson <spallshurgenson@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Fri, 29 Sep 2023 18:40:54 -0400, Rin Stowleigh
    <rstowleigh@x-nospam-x.com> wrote:

    On Fri, 29 Sep 2023 12:02:37 -0400, Spalls Hurgenson >><spallshurgenson@gmail.com> wrote:

    [...]
    It's a shitty move and Valve should know better.

    ----------------
    * Apparently there is a hack to get the older game running, but it
    only works offline... so what's the point?


    A lot of the people that play these games are lazy, jobless gits that
    do nothing with their lives BUT play games... and the same things
    that make them failures at life are the same things that make them get >>addicted to a single game and never move past it....

    Well, that's an interesting take...

    <snip>
    I dunno... if CS2 does everything the old CS games did and does
    it well, maybe its a good thing. If it's not as optimized as CS:GO,
    then to me it's just a return to old school gaming, because once upon
    a time, it was not uncommon to install a game, realize it was a work
    of art but that it wasn't running very well due to outdated
    components. That was the impetus to upgrade the PC components, which >>helped fuel the PC industry and helped fuel PC gaming. The problem
    lately is that new games have just plain sucked, and it removes any
    motive to upgrade.

    While that argument /may/ hold for some games, we're talking
    "Counter-Strike" here. It's not a game that's lacking in audience,
    interest, or resources from its developer. People /would/ have flocked
    to CS2 without Valve killing CS:GO. And if they didn't, it would have
    failed on its merits (you know, like if it were missing features)
    rather than because - gamers are 'lazy, jobless gits' who aren't
    slavering over every newest release because apparently that's they're
    duty as gamers. We saw this with previous Valve multiplayer games - >"Left4Dead 2" and "TeamFortress 2" - where the sequel quickly
    superseded the original despite the originals remaining available to
    play. We see it with many other games too (a good chunk of
    Activision's profits depends on "Call of Duty" refreshes).

    Sure, there will always be some die-hards who remain with the older
    game. Sure, having the older game available will moderate the
    transition to the newer game. With smaller games, those losses /might/
    spell the doom for the newer which - unable to gain audience fast
    enough - never gets any traction in the market. But I can confidently
    say that wouldn't have been the case with "Counter-Strike 2".

    Well there's an old saying, "confidence" is that feeling one gets in
    the instant before they learn something new :)

    If you think CS2 would have had no problem getting folks to switch, I
    can tell say you were absolutely not heavily involved in the switch
    from the original CS to CS source... because what I described is
    exactly what happened. The number of whiney little bedwetters that
    complained about the updated engine and how they were never making the
    switch represented a massive portion of the community.

    Some of this is just a matter of obstinance, and the fact that by and
    large folks that spend all their free time playing games are not very
    adaptable people. But a lot of it was simple economics.. newer
    versions of things often increase the performance requirements of said
    things, and a lot of people take offense when suddenly they are forced
    to purchase an upgrade for their 11 year old PC.

    You'll not convince me that taking away a user's choice was in any way >beneficial to the user.

    I have no doubt of that! (lol) ... we've had conversations like this
    before :)


    Take it off the market? Okay, sure. Make its
    store page less easy to find? Well, maybe. But take away a game people
    paid for (sure, they got a free copy of CS2 out of it, but CS2 is free
    for anyone, so that's not much of a swap)? Fuck you, Valve.

    There's no tangible difference in what Valve did to releasing a new
    patch for a game that updates it substantially, and require the
    installation / running of that patch to connect to servers.

    Are their whiners out there who will spend all of their spare time
    complaining when that happens? Absolutely. Is it fair? Well that's
    not really for me to judge, but long ago, terms of service for these
    kinds of titles were updated to give carte blanche to the game vendor
    to update as needed and as they see fit... they have no legal
    obligation to leave the graphic assets or overall PC requirements in
    the stone age or retain the exact state of the game as originally
    shipped.

    What has always been fascinating is that PC gaming has always been a
    very technology-involved hobby. Yet, a decent percentage of the
    population that is drawn to it are fundamentally neo-luddites who
    expect technology to stand still -- they don't realize technology is a
    never ending hamster wheel.

    Is that mindset catastrophically contradictory and just plain stupid? Hooboy.... yep. But its there.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mike S.@21:1/5 to All on Sat Sep 30 09:49:23 2023
    On Fri, 29 Sep 2023 17:17:04 -0500, candycanearter07 <no@thanks.net>
    wrote:

    They LITERALLY pulled an Overwatch 2. Incredible.
    not that i care that much about CS but still

    I was thinking of Warcraft Reforged. When Blizzard released this
    updated version, the older one was no longer accessible which pissed
    people off.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From H1MEM@21:1/5 to Mike S. on Sat Sep 30 16:20:53 2023
    Mike S. wrote:
    was thinking of Warcraft Reforged. When Blizzard released this
    updated version, the older one was no longer accessible which pissed
    people off.


    Goes back even further. Years ago I registered my original serial keys
    from Starcraft and Broodwar so that it would allow me to download a
    fully patched installer that did not require the original discs all the
    time.

    Some months ago I decided to go and download it again so that I could
    install it on my old Pentium with Windows 98, just for fun, and
    surprise: It was gone. They made the Starcraft 1 HD remake available to everybody through the battle.net client, and pulled out the classic
    installer.

    yep, I had to pirate a game I already own. Not happy about it.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Ant@21:1/5 to wipnoah@gmail.com on Sat Sep 30 21:53:11 2023
    H1MEM <wipnoah@gmail.com> wrote:
    Mike S. wrote:
    was thinking of Warcraft Reforged. When Blizzard released this
    updated version, the older one was no longer accessible which pissed
    people off.


    Goes back even further. Years ago I registered my original serial keys
    from Starcraft and Broodwar so that it would allow me to download a
    fully patched installer that did not require the original discs all the
    time.

    Some months ago I decided to go and download it again so that I could
    install it on my old Pentium with Windows 98, just for fun, and
    surprise: It was gone. They made the Starcraft 1 HD remake available to everybody through the battle.net client, and pulled out the classic installer.

    yep, I had to pirate a game I already own. Not happy about it.

    Uh oh. So, if I wanted to play original Diablo 2 then I will have to play its remaster? :/
    --
    "Though you have not seen [the resurrected Lord Jesus], you love him; and even though you do not see him now, you believe in him and are filled with an inexpressible and glorious joy, for you are receiving the goal of your faith, the salvation of your
    souls." --1 Peter 1:8-9. Last Sept. day b4 Oct. with a cold weekend! Damn mosquitoes (they're winning), illnesses, USA, etc.
    Note: A fixed width font (Courier, Monospace, etc.) is required to see this signature correctly.
    /\___/\ Ant(Dude) @ http://aqfl.net & http://antfarm.home.dhs.org.
    / /\ /\ \ Please nuke ANT if replying by e-mail.
    | |o o| |
    \ _ /
    ( )

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From H1MEM@21:1/5 to Ant on Sun Oct 1 01:38:42 2023
    Ant wrote:

    Uh oh. So, if I wanted to play original Diablo 2 then I will have to
    play its remaster? :/

    I just checked. Well, fudge me. The links for the classic installer have
    been removed and now point to the battle net app installer. There's no
    way of downloading the Warcraft III and Diablo II setups now, just
    adding them to the client.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Ant@21:1/5 to wipnoah@gmail.com on Sun Oct 1 01:45:49 2023
    H1MEM <wipnoah@gmail.com> wrote:
    Ant wrote:

    Uh oh. So, if I wanted to play original Diablo 2 then I will have to
    play its remaster? :/

    I just checked. Well, fudge me. The links for the classic installer have
    been removed and now point to the battle net app installer. There's no
    way of downloading the Warcraft III and Diablo II setups now, just
    adding them to the client.

    Lame! :(
    --
    "Though you have not seen [the resurrected Lord Jesus], you love him; and even though you do not see him now, you believe in him and are filled with an inexpressible and glorious joy, for you are receiving the goal of your faith, the salvation of your
    souls." --1 Peter 1:8-9. Last Sept. day b4 Oct. with a cold weekend! Damn mosquitoes (they're winning), illnesses, USA, etc.
    Note: A fixed width font (Courier, Monospace, etc.) is required to see this signature correctly.
    /\___/\ Ant(Dude) @ http://aqfl.net & http://antfarm.home.dhs.org.
    / /\ /\ \ Please nuke ANT if replying by e-mail.
    | |o o| |
    \ _ /
    ( )

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From JAB@21:1/5 to All on Sun Oct 1 10:19:40 2023
    On 30/09/2023 10:34, H1MEM wrote:
    Yup. That's pretty much why nowadays I don't trust any Game as a
    Service. You just use a service they own, they can do whatever they
    want, and all this it's probably written in those long EULAs we
    forcefully accepted, the other option being nos using it.

    I accept that games as a service have a limited life span whether it's
    the company pulling the plug, the direction the game goes or just
    running out of other players. That's why I think of any money that goes
    into them is effectively lost.

    The problem I have with them is that way so many are set-up so that it's
    broken the concept of here's a game we think you'll enjoy playing so
    give us some money. Now it's, here's a game that we think is tolerable
    and we are going to use every trick in the book to make you keep playing
    and paying.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Spalls Hurgenson@21:1/5 to Ant on Sun Oct 1 08:28:38 2023
    On Sun, 01 Oct 2023 01:45:49 +0000, ant@zimage.comANT (Ant) wrote:

    H1MEM <wipnoah@gmail.com> wrote:
    Ant wrote:

    Uh oh. So, if I wanted to play original Diablo 2 then I will have to
    play its remaster? :/

    I just checked. Well, fudge me. The links for the classic installer have
    been removed and now point to the battle net app installer. There's no
    way of downloading the Warcraft III and Diablo II setups now, just
    adding them to the client.

    Lame! :(

    My CD-ROM version of the game still works, though.

    (Or does it? I honestly don't know. I didn't actually check. I assume
    it works. Probably not for online play, though. At least not via the
    Internet. Local network should still work though. Anyone up for a
    Diablo 2 LAN party? ;-)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Justisaur@21:1/5 to Spalls Hurgenson on Sun Oct 1 06:11:08 2023
    On Sunday, October 1, 2023 at 5:28:45 AM UTC-7, Spalls Hurgenson wrote:
    On Sun, 01 Oct 2023 01:45:49 +0000, a...@zimage.comANT (Ant) wrote:

    H1MEM <wip...@gmail.com> wrote:
    Ant wrote:

    Uh oh. So, if I wanted to play original Diablo 2 then I will have to
    play its remaster? :/

    I just checked. Well, fudge me. The links for the classic installer have >> been removed and now point to the battle net app installer. There's no
    way of downloading the Warcraft III and Diablo II setups now, just
    adding them to the client.

    Lame! :(
    My CD-ROM version of the game still works, though.

    (Or does it? I honestly don't know. I didn't actually check. I assume
    it works. Probably not for online play, though. At least not via the Internet. Local network should still work though. Anyone up for a
    Diablo 2 LAN party? ;-)

    There's usually tools you can use to do that sort of thing over the
    internet too. I remember playing a bout or two of hotseat MoM
    over the internet waaay back in the day.

    - Justisaur

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From H1M3M@21:1/5 to All on Mon Oct 2 09:27:10 2023
    H1MEM wrote:

    I just checked. Well, fudge me. The links for the classic installer
    have been removed and now point to the battle net app installer.
    There's no way of downloading the Warcraft III and Diablo II setups
    now, just adding them to the client.

    Update: I lost 2 hours of sleep tracking the installers for W3 and D2.
    Lots of searches for old pages until I found a link, because Blizzard
    pulled a nasty search and replace of all the links in the support forum, changing them to point to the battle.net based installer.

    The one that I failed to find is Starcraft. I have my original discs and
    a community installer with every patch version on one single package,
    but I kinda wanted to have the original (I have when something is lost
    forever because the owner of the software pulled it).

    The removal of the classic installer seems to relate to the game
    getting updated and integrated with modern battle.Net. Looks like the
    classic battle.net integrated into Starcraft and Diablo II may have been
    been fully dropped. But uh, I just want to use it at lanparties.

    Still, it's a massive dick move, as depending on the Battle.net client
    means that the owner of the service can use DRM to decide in which OSes
    the software can run. Steam is removing the ability to run on Windows 7,
    and Blizzard has done something similar.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)