Malem_Benign wrote: »Once again, guys. I don't want to argue about the causes or responsibilities.
I want official statement.
ALL other titles bought from Steam are playable without Steam. Just keep it in mind.
I assume you need to tag them for that.Malem_Benign wrote: »Some official reply will be very appreciated here...
Even though I suspect they still wouldn't answer. I'm not sure their idea of improving communications includes answering meaningful questions.
Malem_Benign wrote: »AlienatedGoat wrote: »For anyone who really wants away from Steam now, there is this option:
https://forums.elderscrollsonline.com/en/discussion/423493/how-to-purchase-access-to-the-regular-launcher-eso64-exe-for-steam-users/p1
Have you read the topic? There is no technical problem to just let Steam players that already bought the game the access via regular launcher. FOR FREE.
It does appear that Zos is not permitted to allow Steam players to log into the game directly, bypassing Steam.
I say this because some players, for whatever reason, linked their ESO game to Steam even though they bought it elsewhere. The early ones were able to log in directly. However, those that have linked their game more recently cannot use the old workaround.
The best solution going forward is to complain to Steam early and often and never buy a game from Steam that you can buy elsewhere.
Malem_Benign wrote: »It does appear that Zos is not permitted to allow Steam players to log into the game directly, bypassing Steam.
I say this because some players, for whatever reason, linked their ESO game to Steam even though they bought it elsewhere. The early ones were able to log in directly. However, those that have linked their game more recently cannot use the old workaround.
The best solution going forward is to complain to Steam early and often and never buy a game from Steam that you can buy elsewhere.
Another good try to switch attention, but no.
Two different beasts.It does appear that Zos is not permitted to allow Steam players to log into the game directly, bypassing Steam.
I say this because some players, for whatever reason, linked their ESO game to Steam even though they bought it elsewhere. The early ones were able to log in directly. However, those that have linked their game more recently cannot use the old workaround.
The best solution going forward is to complain to Steam early and often and never buy a game from Steam that you can buy elsewhere.
Malem_Benign wrote: »It does appear that Zos is not permitted to allow Steam players to log into the game directly, bypassing Steam.
I say this because some players, for whatever reason, linked their ESO game to Steam even though they bought it elsewhere. The early ones were able to log in directly. However, those that have linked their game more recently cannot use the old workaround.
The best solution going forward is to complain to Steam early and often and never buy a game from Steam that you can buy elsewhere.
Another good try to switch attention, but no.
Merlin13KAGL wrote: »Two different beasts.It does appear that Zos is not permitted to allow Steam players to log into the game directly, bypassing Steam.
I say this because some players, for whatever reason, linked their ESO game to Steam even though they bought it elsewhere. The early ones were able to log in directly. However, those that have linked their game more recently cannot use the old workaround.
The best solution going forward is to complain to Steam early and often and never buy a game from Steam that you can buy elsewhere.
Linking previous game to Steam still uses the standard launcher, it just adds the game to the Steam list (same as any other non-Steam purchased game.) Equally, it can be unlinked from Steam with no consequence. (They can't prevent you from removing a game they never had purchase rights for.)
The Steam login is only required of Steam purchased installs, because it does not use a standard authentication.
I am referring mostly to the folks who so badly wanted this game on Steam in the 3 or so months before it released on that portal.
I can see people would buy it now on Steam, I myself have a huge library of titles bought during one sale or the other.
However, my rule of thumb is, if the game has an existing login portal that is native to the game, then buy the original
AlienatedGoat wrote: »Malem_Benign wrote: »It does appear that Zos is not permitted to allow Steam players to log into the game directly, bypassing Steam.
I say this because some players, for whatever reason, linked their ESO game to Steam even though they bought it elsewhere. The early ones were able to log in directly. However, those that have linked their game more recently cannot use the old workaround.
The best solution going forward is to complain to Steam early and often and never buy a game from Steam that you can buy elsewhere.
Another good try to switch attention, but no.
He's actually right. It's common practice among many gamers these days to not buy any online-only game through Steam if there is a standalone launcher available - especially MMOs. It's because it's an added layer of network connectivity that usually results in added problems.
That doesn't help your situation, though, or those who can't login through the regular launcher/ESO64.exe. Honestly, the only way to help with that is to get your account a license to use them.
@AlienatedGoat , I am referring to the adding of an existing game to the Steam interface (effectively just adding it to your library list and pointing it to the executable.), not the linking that takes place within the ESO account profile.AlienatedGoat wrote: »Merlin13KAGL wrote: »Two different beasts.It does appear that Zos is not permitted to allow Steam players to log into the game directly, bypassing Steam.
I say this because some players, for whatever reason, linked their ESO game to Steam even though they bought it elsewhere. The early ones were able to log in directly. However, those that have linked their game more recently cannot use the old workaround.
The best solution going forward is to complain to Steam early and often and never buy a game from Steam that you can buy elsewhere.
Linking previous game to Steam still uses the standard launcher, it just adds the game to the Steam list (same as any other non-Steam purchased game.) Equally, it can be unlinked from Steam with no consequence. (They can't prevent you from removing a game they never had purchase rights for.)
The Steam login is only required of Steam purchased installs, because it does not use a standard authentication.
They're two different licenses. Steam purchases are one, regular purchases another. Your account can only login through the launcher that it has a license to use.
If you link an existing regular ESO account to a Steam purchase, you now have both licenses. This also works in reverse - activating a regular ESO key on a Steam-made ESO account gives you both licenses.
Merlin13KAGL wrote: »@AlienatedGoat , I am referring to the adding of an existing game to the Steam interface (effectively just adding it to your library list and pointing it to the executable.), not the linking that takes place within the ESO account profile.AlienatedGoat wrote: »Merlin13KAGL wrote: »Two different beasts.It does appear that Zos is not permitted to allow Steam players to log into the game directly, bypassing Steam.
I say this because some players, for whatever reason, linked their ESO game to Steam even though they bought it elsewhere. The early ones were able to log in directly. However, those that have linked their game more recently cannot use the old workaround.
The best solution going forward is to complain to Steam early and often and never buy a game from Steam that you can buy elsewhere.
Linking previous game to Steam still uses the standard launcher, it just adds the game to the Steam list (same as any other non-Steam purchased game.) Equally, it can be unlinked from Steam with no consequence. (They can't prevent you from removing a game they never had purchase rights for.)
The Steam login is only required of Steam purchased installs, because it does not use a standard authentication.
They're two different licenses. Steam purchases are one, regular purchases another. Your account can only login through the launcher that it has a license to use.
If you link an existing regular ESO account to a Steam purchase, you now have both licenses. This also works in reverse - activating a regular ESO key on a Steam-made ESO account gives you both licenses.
If you added the separate purchase to the Steam library, you are not forever bound through Steam. The licensing key, in this case, is the same as it originally was. You're just basically adding the Steam overlay functionality, nothing more.
For now that's (and other people's similar posts) a speculation. Personally I'd want an official statement and clarification on that. Hence I support this topic and OP's request.You clearly ignore the fact that there is a contract between Zos and Steam and that there have been clear changes to prevent non steam purchases that were linked to steam after the fact from logging in without using steam.
nursingninja wrote: »The answer is you need to invent a time machine and buy the game on steam before it started logging in with steam. That way you can have the option of launching it either way.
That's what I did anyways. Well I didnt need to go back in time to do it. But I bought the game on steam in August of 2016 and back then you had to have both accounts.
Single player games can be run in offline mode, this kick in automatically after 30 seconds something.DaveMoeDee wrote: »Malem_Benign wrote: »Once again, guys. I don't want to argue about the causes or responsibilities.
I want official statement.
ALL other titles bought from Steam are playable without Steam. Just keep it in mind.
You are confusing launchable directly from .exe with playable without steam (no steam DRM, no need to authenticate with their servers).
stojekarcub18_ESO wrote: »Been saying since the late 90's...DON'T USE STEAM....
Malem_Benign wrote: »Some official reply will be very appreciated here...
This would be the correct course of action for ZOS to take if they actually cared and weren't trying to scam customers into buying multiple copies of the game.