Skip to main content

A new Steam message reminds you that you don’t own your games

The Steam Deck OLED on a pink background.
Jacob Roach / Digital Trends

Players began to notice a new message in their Steam carts on Thursday. Before completing a purchase, they saw a new message situated underneath the “Continue to payment” button, complete with a little computer graphic. It said: “A purchase of a digital product grants a license for the product on Steam,” with a link to the subscriber agreement.

In clearer language, Valve finally makes it clear that you don’t own the PC games you buy. Instead, you’re granted a license for the software.

Recommended Videos

Steam now shows that you don't own games
byu/Human-Equivalent-154 inSteam

But what changed? This is thanks to a new California law (AB 2426) that was signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom on September 24, which requires companies to make it clear that consumers don’t own digital goods — like movies, e-books, and, of course, video games — after a purchase. Otherwise, companies could be fined for false advertising. The law specifies that stores can offer a “license” only by providing easy access to the conditions and terms of service of said license.

A license specifically refers to a product that the seller can revoke access to if it no longer holds the license for it. This law doesn’t apply to a game that the store can’t revoke access to, like if you’re allowed to still play it as an offline download after it’s no longer available.

“As retailers continue to pivot away from selling physical media, the need for consumer protections on the purchase of digital media has become increasingly more important,” bill author Jacqui Irwin said in a press release.

This bill was signed in response to a number of incidents where users were no longer able to access movies, TV shows, and video games digitally after they’ve been removed from those platforms. The press release specifically calls out a number of recent video game delistings, such as Ubisoft removing The Crew from online stores and shutting down servers, making the game unplayable for previous owners. Following fan outcry, Ubisoft announced that it was exploring offline modes for future The Crew games.

While Irwin told Game File that the inciting incident for the bill was Sony announcing it would be removing Discovery shows from the PlayStation Store, “Ubisoft’s actions with The Crew further highlighted just how widespread this issue is.”

While the bill doesn’t go into effect until the new year, it looks like Valve is getting ahead of the requirement. It won’t change anything about how purchasing off the Steam store works, but it will just remind you that everything you buy is temporary.

This is just the latest change Valve made to its Steam subscriber agreement. It recently updated it to note that users will no longer be put into forced arbitration if they want to sue the company.

Carli Velocci
Carli is a technology, culture, and games editor and journalist. They were the Gaming Lead and Copy Chief at Windows Central…
Don’t sleep on Infinity Nikki. It could be 2024’s biggest video game
girl with pink hair and cat mascot pointing to sky

If you thought you knew every major game coming for the rest of 2024, think again. On Wednesday night, Infold Games announced that Infinity Nikki will launch on December 5 for PlayStation 5, PC, and mobile. If you’ve never heard of it before, you’re about to in a very big way.

The upcoming free-to-play game is the fifth entry in the mega-popular Nikki series. It takes what was once a mobile dress-up gacha game and turns it into a full open-world console game with shades of The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild peppered in. At first glance, you may be tempted to write it off as niche, but that would be a tactical error. Infinity Nikki will launch at the perfect time, landing in the cross section of multiple trends that have defined 2024. If all goes well for Infold Games, it could smash records. If you’re still a little confused as to why, here are all of the reasons that Infinity Nikki could be a sensation.
The Nikki series is enormous
Infinity Nikki - Release Date Trailer | PS5 Games

Read more
Black Ops 6 just can’t compete with these 2 RPGs on Steam
Lucanis in Dragon Age: The Veilguard in center frame.

Despite Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 on its way to being one of the biggest Call of Duty launches of all time, two role-playing games are giving it a run for its money.

Dragon Age: The Veilguard, the latest RPG from BioWare and the first Dragon Age game in over a decade, is currently selling better on Steam than Black Ops 6 just a day after release. According to the Steam top sellers list, The Veilguard is just barely outranking Black Ops 6's single-player campaign as the top seller on the platform, followed by MMO Throne and Liberty and Monster Hunter Wilds, an open beta for which launched on Friday.

Read more
Make sure you install the latest Steam Deck October update
A Steam Deck OLED sits on a table.

Valve released a big Steam Deck update this week in the Stable channel that the company says can improve performance for its handheld across the board, and even grant up to 10% more battery life for the original Steam Deck in certain situations.

The manufacturer releases consistent hotfixes and small updates to the Steam Deck beta channel, but they usually fix a couple of things that most players typically won't notice. However, SteamOS 3.6.19 is huge, with countless updates thanks in part to two big changes: a move to a more recent Arch Linux base, and an update to Mesa 24.1 for the graphics driver.

Read more