Daniel TGC wrote: "1) I have a PC, why do I need yet another console box in my living room? And if there is no box what's the point in installing yet another OS on my PC, and one that's less capable than Windows.
2) It's just a linux distro, linux doesn't get all the good games, and wine emulation still leaves much to be desired.
3) If a steam OS box is to compete with a PC's graphics or even the likes of PS4 and XBOX One then it'll need some pretty expensive hardware inside.
4) It just going to annoy me that ALL THOSE WINDOWS games I own can't be used on Steam OS. After all, it's happening already. It annoys the pants off me that I can't play most of my Steam games in my Mac OS machine without bootcamping windows.
5) Gaming is mostly moving towards mobile platforms like Android and iOS. As those devices get better and better (as we see with Ouya) people will probably just start using their tablets as their home console system.
6) Do we really need another operating system? Really?!?!? There's already 20 quadrillion, couldn't Steam just run on Ubuntu or something?"
1. If you don't want it don't get it, it's free to not install too.
2. Steam is the biggest digital distributor of games; they have released a Linux OS and are continuing to port games to Linux; I'll leave you to fill in the blanks.
3. Yes it can be expensive, this is why I don't buy consoles any more. I have a computer that does all kinds of things, building/buying another machine to do the same job or fewer jobs is a pointless waste of money IMO.
4. I have a few Windows games I can't play any more, which sucks but I'm over it already. I bought Mark of the Ninja on Steam for Windows and now they have a Linux version I can download it for free, so hopefully the same will happen with most games. Wine works pretty well these days for pretty much anything
but games. Mount & Blade works well with it but I haven't had much success with others.
5. I wouldn't say gaming is moving anywhere, there are more people gaming more often and mobile devices have allowed that, but there are huge genres of games that aren't suited to mobile devices.
6. Yes, we need as many as we can get. This is how open source development evolves. I do wish there was more focus within the community to collaborate instead of everyone starting their own project to solve the same problem, but maybe if it was that way there would be less freedom of ideas and we would actually see slower improvements.

Formerly OBese87.