Valve ban advertising-based business models on Steam, no forced adverts like in mobile games
-
Valve applying a bit of regulation (the right way) and still making piles of money, weird how that works.
I've been saying for years that if we want healthy economies, compare to human health. When the factors keeping growth at a controlled rate are disrupted, you end up with cancer.
Rant is related although covering hardware manufacturing rather than software:
Commodore manufactured in the USA and Europe some of the best-selling personal computers ever under lack of regulation. When the market became dominated by IBM-compatibles and Macintoshes, Commodore exited the market and left Superfund sites all over. (Superfund is basically EPA disaster declaration allowing for taxpayer funds release for large-scale cleanup operations.) Privatize the profits and socialize the losses. (lack of regulation led to the wrong way)
-
I can vouch for Luanti (formerly known as Minetest), Simon Tatham's Puzzle Collection, and RetroArch.
-
I’ve had a hard time finding quality games in there. Outside of Shattered Pixel Dungeon they are few and far between.
You're not wrong. F-Droid would benefit greatly from having some sort of curated "best of" list, especially for games.
That said, here are some I think are reasonably quality:
- Mindustry
- Frozen Bubble
- Burger Party
- Endless Sky
- Vector Pinball
- Surge Engine
- SuperTuxKart
- Xeonjia Ice Adventure
tried to just get the hill climb racing game or a similar one.
F-Droid has Lato, which seems to be in the same genre. It's pretty polished in terms of having a nice graphical style and music, but IMO doesn't quite make the list above because the gameplay seems a little simplistic compared to e.g. Hill Climb Racing. Still, worth a shot if you're looking for that sort of game.
-
But trading cards are real physical things that you can sell loot boxes and virtual goods that will disappear if the game developers ever decide that they'll go and you also can't sell them.
The problem with the CS go gambling site was that that was an extra thing on top of the skins. The gambling was added by a third party.
No one's gambling with Pokémon cards. Any attempt to do so and the Pokémon company would come down on you like a ton of bricks they're about as ligacious as Nintendo.
-
to anyone reading this comment:
I strongly recommend going to this government website and checking out the superfund sites located in your area. If you live anywhere east of the Mississippi, your chances of living near or not far from an illegal dumping site are really high.
https://www.epa.gov/superfund/search-superfund-sites-where-you-live