this post was submitted on 28 Sep 2024
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I want to give the perspective that from a technical standpoint, even free games on steam require the steam client to install and while the license to play the game is free steam is licensing your account to own the game. The game doesn't require steam after that and usually this means the game is available elsewhere, but for the specific case of "free games on steam", steam is still acting to manage digital rights.
Means you can also zip the folder and archive it for later.
They do still have some basic protection. Steam’s default, loose, DRM requires you to launch Steam when you open a game’s executable.
Yesnt. I certainly played games on school pcs (Like HL2, Hotline Miami 2. Other students played Binding of Isaac and other smaller or rogue-like) and only with executables I got from Steam.
That may have been earlier than Steam's DRM. Nowadays you need to copy a steam emulator (a few DLLs) into the executables folder as well before sharing.