ex-railwayman
New member
Hi Steve,
Your not running your game "de-Steamed", if you are only running it in offline mode. That is not what it means, it is actually detaching RW2 from Steam completely. The whole point of a de-Steamed copy of RW2 is that you have complete control over what you want installed. No auto updates wiping out your third party sound sets etc.
cheers,
Mike.
I appreciate your help Mike, sorry, but, the text I've highlighted is what I don't understand, if RS.com's creations (routes, locomotives, etc,) can only be obtained by purchasing them through Steam, how can we do this, if we have 'de-steamed' our game??
I'm just miffed that we cannot install the core game and our Payware add-ons without utilising the Steam/Valve activation process in the first instance, just like we could do with our old games, which, quite frankly if we had known about from day 1, may have possibly put a lot of folks off from purchasing the game, hindsight is a wonderful thing, naievity at it's best, no doubt.
I agreed with RRsignal who asked - What about the customer's right to protect their investment and be able to use the software they paid for? Why should we be at the mercy of activation servers that may or may not be there in a couple of years?
Because we all now live in a scaremongering society, oh sorry, a scaremongering CAPITALIST society, whereby we are regulated by companies who think they need to protect their investments at all costs at the mercy of honest folks, without our agreement.
And I could cynically add that it may only be a matter of time before N3V and Railworks start charging customers for the privilege of playing on their respective Multiplayer functions, on a hourly/daily basis, just like will happen on other PC games such as Call of Duty, FIFA12, etc, etc. Read the internet, it won't be long before this becomes the norm in future.
Cheerz. ex.