The question wasn't what would take to make you give Epic a try, it was what should Epic have done to be able to compete with Steam while also remaining pro-consumer, etc. Sure,
you may give them a try, but that could be a one-time thing only. What about other users?
My point is that offering offline installers and better refund policy is insufficient to take away a chunk of Steam's market share. GOG, while not tiny, is not really a competitor to Steam. It gets AAA games but only after they have ran their course and are safe to be "dumped" to GOG.
Secondly, you keep using the word "bribe", which I would disagree is apt. As I've told you in the past, a bribe implies illegality. There is nothing illegal here. It a business contract between two parties. Also, for the sake of moral integrity, if Epic is to be criticized for these exclusive games, so should the publishers/developers as well, as they can simply reject Epic's proposition. This, coincidentally, also applies to bribes. If one party is offering a bribe, and another party is accepting it, which of them is considered guilty? Could it be both, with even the receiver of the bribe being considered more responsible?
Where is the outrage aimed at the publishers/developers who have agreed to the exclusivity deals? It's nowhere to be found. Why is that? Is it because people are intellectually dishonest to apply the same standard and principles evenly? Is it because people are not intelligent enough to realize that if they call these exclusivity deals "bribes", they need to also put blame on the developers/publishers? Is it because it doesn't look as good to blame a publisher/developer (especially smaller ones), whereas Epic has been established as "cool to hate" so let's jump on the blame/hate bandwagon. All the cool kids are doing it.
Also, it seems to me you have a very skewed interpretation of what anti-consumer is. You not benefiting from something is not the same as it being anti-consumer. "Anti" implies a negative impact. And since you actually mentioned that you would be receiving an inferior product, how so? How is Game X worse when on Epic's store, compared to if it is purchased from Steam? Would it be less buggy if it were to be released on Steam? Would it have better gameplay or story if released on Steam?
I'm not sure to what security issues you are referring. I'm not arguing there aren't any but I'm not aware of any major ones.
PayPal
is a
supported payment method.
Epic's launcher is not trash. It may not be as good as Steam and it may still require many improvements and polish but to call it "trash" is absurd. It performs its primary function: to allow users to purchase, download, and play games. Just like most people, I would very much like to see various missing features added to it, but it is not "trash". Believe it or not, I actually find it better than Origin and even GOG Galaxy. The latter is pretty ambitious and has nice ideas, but the execution leaves a lot to be desired in my opinion. I may even like Epic's launcher more than Ubisoft's.
Of course, it is your right to not like Epic's launcher and refuse to use it, but your
subjective preference does not make it anti-consumer or "trash".
Sell out your freedom? Wow, that's some melodrama right there.
You are aware that there are games that can only be purchased on Steam, right? Can I apply the same logic that Steam is limiting my freedom as to where I can purchase said games?