Or, I might not be surprised at all. You might find Borderlands for the next 20 years, but what about the games that only sold like 40k copies to begin with?
ColeSloth
To maximize profits and costs they can go after, and to be a bit less on the radar of the public eye. Now that palworld is essentially done making money, Nintendo can go after that amount.
Say it is the throwing spheres that Nintendo is basing the suit off of. If Nintendo tried suing in the midst of its popularity, palworld could have just switched the capture system to like a special gun or cubes or something. Nintendo wanted to wait in order to financially crush them into dust.
Good luck finding a semi obscure 15 year old game on the high seas.
I too, played "Combat" on Atari.
The same reason they took it back out of skittles and no one gets apple flavored suckers. It isn't up to snuff.
If a game gets lost in the steam store and no one ever plays it, was it ever a game at all?
Which is all that would happen if third parties decide they don't like the terms that valve and them agreed to.
Yeah....no it isn't.
Yeah? Well they also used to work, so idgaf.
What do you think "video killed the radio star" was about?
Valve just doesn't allow cheaper prices from other storefronts if it's a steam key being sold, where valve is the one footing the bill for the server costs. There are games for sale on epic all the time that are better deals than what's on steam. But when you buy a game on epic, you're using epics servers/bandwidth.
Nooooooo