• Cethin
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    132 months ago

    I think it’s a great rule. If you’re sharing your library with others, don’t be am asshole and cheat. If you do you’ll be a disappointment to them too. More social pressure to not cheat is only a positive in my opinion, but also I will never cheat and I only share my library with people I’m confident won’t cheat as well. I don’t associate with people who want to ruin other’s fun. If you do then that’s on you. It’s your choice to risk getting banned.

    • @lightnsfw@reddthat.com
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      2 months ago

      It also stops people from buying a game, sharing it to themselves on an alt account and using cheats. Then just spinning up a new alt account at no cost when the first one gets banned.

      • Cethin
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        12 months ago

        Steam Families is not just used by families.

      • @papertowels
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        12 months ago

        Sounds like a great life lesson to be taught by a responsible adult to a 24 year old discovering cheats.

          • @papertowels
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            12 months ago

            Not sure where you’re going with this - I was implying that there are consequences for cheating, like losing access to a game library even if temporary.

              • @papertowels
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                2 months ago

                I can’t even imagine if I were a kid and made my parent lose access to a lot of games.

                Well it’d be just the one game that they cheated in. That’s where you can sit the kid down and tell him that cheating has consequences. Ideally this talk would’ve happened before you share access though - I’m thinking of it as making sure the kid knows how to drive before you let them borrow the keys to your car.

                EDIT: just to be clear, when I brought up the kid losing access to a library, I meant the shared access being revoked by the parent.

                  • @papertowels
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                    2 months ago

                    Parents just have to make sure the kid understands to not cheat before sharing the account. It might sound new to us because we never grew up with this scenario, but it seems reasonable to me.

                    Again, it’s just making sure the kid is a safe driver before letting them borrow keys to the family van.

                    If the ban worries you, you can just not share the games - this is strictly an upside and there’s no penalty for maintaining the status quo and not using this feature.