| ChichiriMuyo said: That's... not that big of a deal. It's too early in his working there for him to really repair anythign yet, and the project may have been in the works before he came along. Unless you've got some evidence that says otherwise, I don't think the man single-handedly pushed the project through in a week's time. Chances are, just to do the negotiations with Valve to get the games on the service would take longer than a week. Save these sort of proclamations until the man actually does something. Right now he's just seeing someone else's plans to their conclusion. And it's a simple money grab at that, from a well they've tapped many times. Alert us when Atari makes a new game worth buying. Or, better yet, when Atari is financially stable again. |
atari's main probably is their finacial issues. putting their titles on steam = instant cash flow. Come now the 80 pack of classic arcade/2600 titles which all earned a good amount of cash back in the day will make even more.
and negotiations with valve? valve WANTS developers to support Steam why would they even consider saying no to any developer who wants to jump on?










