My friend is an indie game developer and he once told me the typical refund rate, which I think was only a little lower than this. I don’t think the game length is playing that large a role here, rather people use that refund policy as a way to try out a game (like a demo). Probably most of the people who refunded wouldn’t have bought it in the first place without that refund policy, so he shouldn’t really view this as “because of this policy I lost 55K sales”.
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Cake day: June 14th, 2023
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- festus@lemmy.catoPC Gaming@lemmy.ca•Indie Dev Says Game Refunded 55,000 Times Via Steam LoopholeEnglish25·5 days ago
- festus@lemmy.catoPC Gaming@lemmy.ca•New Steam Machine rival offers a Ryzen 9 CPU and RX 7600 XT for $849, but you have to bring your own RAM [aside of 16GB VRAM included already]English6·7 days ago
Short answer is yes, it requires hardware that to my knowledge isn’t available on normal consumer motherboards.
- festus@lemmy.catoPolitical Memes@lemmy.world•Every week was wondering what dumb shit he'll do nextEnglish42·9 days ago
+1. In my personal life things are much better and improved, but in terms of world stability, health of politics (at least where I live), the observed impacts of climate change, etc. pre-2016 was so much better on average.
Switching to something rolling release makes sense. My Arch setup (btw) has always felt much more stable than when I was using Ubuntu, because with Ubuntu I’d inevitatebly run into a bug, find out it was fixed months ago but won’t be backported, and then either live with it or try custom-installing the newer version of that thing. Or I’d install something manually that expected dependency X be the latest version, etc.