Valve Announces Steam Greenlight: Steam Workshop for Indie Games to be sold on Steam

Awesome, awesome awesome.

Offensive can be kinda vague. Hopefully it just boils down to things that incite hatred.

Agreed. The question I have: would The Binding of Issac have made it through this process? (I don't personally find it offensive, but people who don't understand the implications of the original Binding of Issac story probably take it on face value as offensive)
 
Thank god. This or something like it is one of the last features Steam was desperately lacking.

They're still lacking vending machine support, dry cleaning, current-gen emulation and "take your dog out" option.

But yeah, when we're talking about PC gaming, there's not much left for them (that they haven't announced yet - I'm looking at you, Couch Mode).
 
I'm fairly certain that "offensive" would mean something like "Custer's Revenge II: Rape Harder" or something like that.
 
Let's get straight to the point how many days less do we have to wait for HL3 due to the time this will save?
 
Sounds good in theory, not sure of the crowd voting tho

What if the voters all vote up a specific type of game/genre? Soon the channel will be flooded with people trying those games
 
Sounds good in theory, not sure of the crowd voting tho

What if the voters all vote up a specific type of game/genre? Soon the channel will be flooded with people trying those games

Sounds like the numbers needed will be relative to the genre / type of game.
 
What would be the legality of posting something made with, say RPG Maker? I've seen games made with RPG Maker for sale on various sites and I'm wondering if 100% of the assets have to be yours in order to put the game up for sale.
 
What would be the legality of posting something made with, say RPG Maker? I've seen games made with RPG Maker for sale on various sites and I'm wondering if 100% of the assets have to be yours in order to put the game up for sale.
It depends on the licensing agreement in the software from a legal standpoint (basically RPGMaker has to be cool with it) and probably if it can be compiled into a standalone executable from Valve's standpoint.

EDIT: The RPG maker website says yes to both of those questions, so it all depends on how Valve feels
 
PS4 and 720 need to support Steam when they come out. Valve is slowly taking over the DD front of the PC, so they may as well go for consoles as well.
 
I lol'd. Why the hell would this ever happen?

Because the digital space on consoles is awful right now from a consumer standpoint and based on what devs have said their standpoint as well. I don't think we'll ever see Steam itself on a console, but they should be doing a lot of things Valve already does.
 
Great News. Valve often feels like a force of good in an otherwise pretty shameless business. I'm thinking about getting rid of my consoles, buying a PC and just go full steam ahead one day.
 
I hope this doesn't get abused, at least for crappy games - "vote for my game and get a free copy of it if it makes it onto Steam"

Is "vote for my crappy game and get a free copy of my crappy game!" really a concern?

Does it even matter that Bad Rats exists on the store, when nobody sane is buying it?
 
Wait, so will this be the ONLY way to get games on Steam now?

Don't be daft. This is here to end the problem of certain indie games, for some strange and arbitrary reason, not winding up on Steam. It happens, and it's really strange. Some really good-looking games have unfortunately not been released on the service, and this is set to end that by providing an automated function for the community to vote in games. I imagine it's to compliment the vetting process already there.

I haven't looked at how it works exactly, but it should be reputation-based to a degree. Example: You have a good reputation for voting for mostly good/excellent games, therefore your vote is worth more as you obviously have good taste and are well-read on these kinds of things.

It'd be used to pre-emptively end what is bound to be a practice of shitty developers getting people/bots to spam the list. If this is abused, Steam could be flooded with lots of Bad Rats-level shite.
 
Is "vote for my crappy game and get a free copy of my crappy game!" really a concern?

Does it even matter that Bad Rats exists on the store, when nobody sane is buying it?

if this system works then you wont find crappy games because they wont get trough the voting process.
 
Good initiative by Valve. But I gotta say that GOG.com has had this for ages.

Also, inb4 Blizzard games and HL3 being at the top.
 
Just got the PR:

VALVE ANNOUNCES STEAM GREENLIGHT
Enlisting Community to Help in Selecting New Titles

July 9, 2012 -- Valve, creators of best-selling game franchises (such as Counter-Strike, Half-Life, Left 4 Dead, Portal, and Team Fortress) and leading technologies (such as Steam and Source), today announced Steam Greenlight, a new platform feature that enlists the community's help in selecting some of the next games to be released on Steam.

Steam Greenlight will allow developers and publishers to post information and media about their game in an effort to convince the Community that their game should be released on Steam. Greenlight piggybacks on Steam Workshop's flexible system that organizes content and lets customers rate and leave feedback.

As well as serving as a clearing house for game submissions, Greenlight will provide an incredible level of added exposure for new games and an opportunity to connect directly with potential customers and fans.

"Making the call to publish or not publish a title isn't fun," said Anna Sweet, at Valve. "Many times opinions vary and our internal jury is hung on a decision. But with the introduction of the Steam Workshop we realized an opportunity to enlist the community's help as we review certain titles and, hopefully, increase the volume and quality of creative submissions."

Steam Greenlight will be released August 30.
 
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