What exactly is Steam? Isn't it DRM?
What can I do with it?
Arqade is a question and answer site for passionate videogamers on all platforms. It only takes a minute to sign up.
Sign up to join this communityWhat exactly is Steam? Isn't it DRM?
What can I do with it?
Steam is DRM. Steam is also DRM done right.
When you "own" a game through the service, you (normally) get to install it on all of your computers for no additional fee. No questions asked. No licenses. No CD keys. Zero click installs.
Steam does many offers and offers a number of free demos. Steam also brings an actually useful in-game overlay (which, e.g., even lets you open YouTube or this site without tabbing out!). Steam finally has important social features like notifying that your friend has joined a game (and for supported games, there's a feature to one-click-join them as well). etc.
Mind you, Steam does have some points where it doesn't shine. My main pet peeve is offline gaming does not work if the Steam client thinks there is an update it should download and install; typically you only find out when it's too late. A second point where Steam is less than great is that you need to own a non-free game to enable most of the social features, and they are a large part of the appeal.
Here's what Steam offers:
Certainly, many of these can be setup or accessed without Steam in some form or another. The biggest advantage is that it is all in one simple package.
The cost is:
It's a distribution system. It allows you to buy games once and then play them on any computer. It also keeps your games up-to-date without having to hunt for patches.
It also has a great community feature which allows you to socialise with friends even while playing, meet up with them and see what games they play.
To answer your other question, it can be a form of DRM, but it doesn't impede you in any way. You can put Steam in offline mode and you will be able to continue playing.
For more information, see its Wikipedia page or the official site.
Course, there's cons too. Mainly the fact you can't sell games in your Steam account.
In term of pros, steam offers you :
Inside the game you won't really feel any difference from a CD version of your game, except that you can keep on chatting with your friends through steam chat. Of course if you use Skype, Teamspeak or any other chat service like this, there is no real difference.
In term on Cons, you could mention that :
Steam is a PITA when you want to play games over a lan without an internet connection.
Steam is basically an online delivery system and market place for Valve Games. Good or Bad is very subjective, so I'm not going to speak to that, but I'll say that I think it's a cool idea because it makes managing the titles you own easier.
It's also probably good for Valve since it makes it easier for consumers to buy, hence more revenue.
On steam, you can buy games (mostly Valve) and store them there. There are demos, dedicated servers and etc. It's easy for finding your games.