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5 Reasons Why Apple Should Acquire Valve

by - source: Tom's Hardware UK

Say it ain't so!

Valve’s Steam game distribution service for Mac is available now and officially introduces the Mac to a gaming environment only PC owners could enjoy so far. Conceivably, Steam for Mac has huge implications for gaming on the Mac, but for Steam as well and the more you think about it, the more it makes perfect sense that Apple and Valve are working together. In fact, why hasn’t Apple purchased Steam yet? Here are 5 reasons why Apple should write a check now.

It has taken Valve nearly seven years to bring Steam to the Mac (with one reason being an arrogant and notoriously unsupportive Apple.) But the service has finally landed and is now available to Mac users via a dedicated “lightweight” client. There is no doubt that Valve will be able to extend its user base, which already includes 25 million customers (as of last January). Initial Valve games available include Half Life 2, Left 4 Dead 2, and Team Fortress 2. More than a thousand third party titles are accessible through Steam. and if the Mac version is successful, we should see more and more games become available over time. 

That is, of course, if Steam remains what it is today and Apple does not buy Valve. Here are 5 reasons why it is entirely feasible why Apple could buy Valve. Feel free to jump into the discussion below and use this article as food for thought.

It’s the content, silly!

If you haven’t noticed yet, Apple is rapidly developing a money printing machine that is based on its iTunes content distribution service. Chances are that the share of revenues generated from iTunes will increase, rather than decrease. So far, Apple has been offering music, TV shows, movies, podcasts as well as software (AppStore) and books. So what about games? Are games just part of the AppStore? Or do they deserve their own store?
What made me think was Valve founder Gabe Newell who recently said that gaming is transitioning from being entertainment as a product to entertainment as a service. Of course, this statement promotes Steam, but it fits in Apple’s business model as well. Given the size of the gaming market, I absolutely believe that Apple will turn gaming content into its own (service) store.

A Proven Platform  

Steam has matured for almost seven years, is available in 21 languages, offers social networking and supports pretty robust digital rights management. If there is a game distribution platform that can alleviate Apple’s piracy concerns and work very well from the start then it would be Steam.

Yes, Apple could develop its own service, but it needs to invest time it does not as well as money (which it has) into the software, service and marketing. Steam is established and it is anchored deep in the PC gaming community – a crowd that could be a particularly attractive target group as Apple gets more serious about its gaming efforts on platforms other than the Mac. Steam would be outrageously expensive for Apple now, but we know it is sitting on a pile of cash and Steam simply works. In fact, the usage model is very similar to that of what Apple users are used to: Install the client and it just runs.    

iPad, iPad, iPad

That of course, brings us to the iPad. It would be foolish to dismiss the iPhone, iPod or iPad as inferior casual gaming platforms. Apple has already shown that gaming content on those devices is critical and the iPad will only increase the company’s traction in this segment. The AppStore may soon not be enough anymore for Apple to promote and offer game content. So, what about Steam? I truly believe that the iPad, if it is as successful as analysts believe today, could singlehandedly prompt Apple to make a considerable investment into gaming. For Steam, that could mean that game content would branch out significantly to (Apple) mobile and handheld devices. Imagine the potential of sales to iPad owners. Breathtaking.  

The Cloud

Steam Cloud was released back in 2008 and gives Steam users the ability to store game settings and saves in a central location that can be accessed via an Internet connection. If we think about the fact that Valve plans on offering Steam to Mac and Windows users simultaneously and enable a user to play a game via both a Mac and a PC (free Mac downloads will be available for those games that have already been purchased), the obvious thought is how well this concept could work for Apple and its MobileMe service – which offers cloud-based information storage across multiple platforms. If Apple promotes cross-platform gaming (Mac, iPad, iPhone, iPod), it does not get much better than a cloud service that could be integrated into MobileMe – Valve already has it.

Control

It is believed that Steam holds a 70% market share in digital game distribution these days. This fact gives Apple great reach with Steam as a partner. However, if Steam for the Mac is successful and if Steam gains traction among Mac users, Steam could potentially pose a risk to Apple’s approach to control its platform – hardware and software. We know that Apple prefers control over the content that is provided to its platform. It is rather unlikely that Apple will allow Valve and Steam to become a powerful force in the Mac gaming market and potentially expand into a service that could compete with the AppStore as Valve could possibly add games for the iPod, iPhone and iPad. Given the financial opportunity, it would be rather silly if Valve passed on offering content for Apple’s other platforms. This fact alone turns Valve int a potential acquisition target for a deep-pocketed company such as Apple.

From today’s perspective, it seems rather unlikely that Apple in fact would acquire Steam. But the opportunity is there and the financials could easily support such an acquisition. Whether Apple acquires Steam or not, it will make much more significant investments into gaming and expand its presence in the global gaming market.    

Wolfgang Gruener is a technology journalist and analyst. He was managing editor for the Tom’s Hardware news section from 2003 to 2005, before launching and acquiring TG Daily. Today, Wolfgang works with startups and publishes his thoughts and analysis on critical and emerging technologies and products at Conceivablytech.com.

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wonspur 12/05/2010 20:32
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Fuck that.... if apple did anything with Valve they would absolutely ruin them. The reason valve is so successful is because they are privately owned, which means they dont produce shit games.

n1kn31m 12/05/2010 20:35
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i'd rather cut off my gaming-fingers before seeing something of the sort go through!

Eclectik 12/05/2010 21:02
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Are you crazy? Apple buy Steam, HELL NO!

princeofdreams 12/05/2010 21:05
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If Apple bought Steam, then nearly every PC customer using Steam would leave the service to find an alternative system (D2D possibly)

Bedsides Gabe Newell is almost as egocentric (I did say almost)as Steve Jobs, I doubt very much he would sell. Besides what do Apple really know about PC gamers? They don't even support gamers on their own inferior machines

ksampanna 12/05/2010 21:46
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The whole idea is preposterous. It will be like Osama tried to take over America..

Clintonio 12/05/2010 21:44
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-2+

Do. Not. Dare. Apple.

I'd leave.

andybird123 12/05/2010 21:46
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the type of gaming experience apple fans enjoy is already catered for by the nintendo wii...

Clintonio 12/05/2010 21:46
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Also; this article is trash. Tuan, the iPad is sh*t for gaming Steam-style. I am not a fool. I am just pointing out the situation that your shiny-obsession has caused you to overlook.

irish_adam 12/05/2010 22:10
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O.o apple dont care about gaming and they never really have so why would they bother? their machines cant even play games that well so it would be a poor service for them.

Only an Apple fan boy could come up with something so stupid as this

shakari 12/05/2010 22:19
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I would hope it really doesnt happen ever. It would not just ruin steam but also pc games for a massive chunk of people out there.

Of course these are reasons why apple may have allready talked to steam about it, we never know. I just really really hope that valve have some balls and say no at every single offer apple might put foward.

MAC_HATER 12/05/2010 22:53
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oh no you dont - if apple aqquire valve it will just turn steam into igames - the even more bloated horrible to sue brother of itunes

ive sunk a lot of money into valve and steam and id hate for it to get clusterf*cked by apple

ChrisCornell 13/05/2010 01:56
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-1+

If Apple buys Steam, I'm not gonna use Steam anymore - And i purchase games for around 400$ per year.

santfu 13/05/2010 02:06
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This article is a shit stir. Not impressed.

Ko0lHaNDLuKe 13/05/2010 05:35
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WTF?!? Do not encourage Apple to buy Valve! They would ruin it! I would like to see the next Half Life instalment sometime this millennia...

cj_online 13/05/2010 06:59
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Interesting article from Apple's standpoint... but for the common PC gamer's perspective... this shit aint goin down...

Anonymous 13/05/2010 08:33
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Off topic but I believe that the most powerful buyout would be Sony buying AMD, then Sony could buy Value. My logic is simple: take a PS3, double everything in it, combine with AMD tech, add in 8GB RAM, 2x1.5TB storage drives, and 2x120GB SSDs and you will have the ultimate machine. Based on a new OS, e.g. a combination of PS3 and Gentoo, and there will be nothing stopping Sony.

Herr_Koos 13/05/2010 09:13
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No, no, no, a THOUSAND times no. Apple would be the death of Valve. Imagine Steve Jobs telling Valve what to do. It doesn't bear thinking about...

plasmastorm 13/05/2010 10:19
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The one thing that would save steam from such a thing is that luckily for us apple hate anything to do with PC's, which valve work with.

Anonymous 13/05/2010 11:27
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If this ever happens...you'd better move house.
Probably continent too.
Maybe shift to another ethereal plane just to make sure.

Even there though...the hate will find you.
Apple should not buy Valve...Valve should buy Apple...I like that idea more.

Herr_Koos 13/05/2010 11:46
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Hmm.. Valve buys Apple, and then make Steve jump through hoops and do magic tricks.. for cake!

Skid 13/05/2010 13:32
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I've never seen so many comments on the UK site before. To sum up:

Ohh hell no, you did not just suggest that.

LeRoo 13/05/2010 13:57
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If it did happen, I wonder if all games would have to be written using 'open standards' in order to qualify for distribution? Maybe even restrict developers to using HTML5, CSS and JavaScript to ensure cross platfrom compatibility, even IPad users can then play the latest block busters trurning Steam into one giant Apple feeding, Steve worshipping, gaming utopia.

Yuk.

silverblue 15/05/2010 14:02
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Toms are just doing this because they know it'll get a reaction.

Certainly worked.

Anonymous 15/05/2010 16:50
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hahahah get the oint no1 wud want this to happen apple is kind of evil.. they just monopolised everything ophones ipods macs there overely expensive they wud prob make a valve games max exclusives lol THIS IS THE SAME AS MICROSHAFT PURCHASING VALVE HEL NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO

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