![]() ![]() When I buy a game on Steam or GOG, that game has to convince me not to continue playing it. One of the main differences between Microsoft Game Pass and Steam is that you are paying a monthly rate for access to a game library rather than actually buying a game which you can play at your leisure. At least on the surface its flashy and garish. The Outer Worlds show us a solar system where corporations are almost unchecked in their power and control. So, I took the plunge in November and gave the Game Pass a try. Buying all those titles would have cost me a small fortune. ![]() In November, I looked at the platform and saw they had a lot of other games on my Steam Wishlist, including A Plague Tale: Innocence, Mutant Year Zero, Age of Wonders: Planetfall, Bloodstained:Ritual of the Night, Dragon Quest XI: Echoes of an Elusive Age, and No Man’s Sky. The primary game I wanted to play was The Outer Words. One thing I had been considering awhile was the Microsoft Game Pass. Since then, I’ve bought games on GOG, Origin, Uplay, and the Epic store, resenting each additional launcher I had to install, but not enough to pass up a good deal on a game I really wanted to play. In 2013 I bought my first Steam game, a rather mediocre rpg called Aarklash: Legacy, which I couldn’t get anywhere else. Paradox’s Gamersgate was my first digital platform, which I tried out because I was disenchanted with the AAA roleplaying games on the PC in 2011 and was looking for something different. I have tried all sorts of game platforms. ![]()
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