I gave you my answer - and I can only answer for me - if you were expecting me or any single person to provide an all-encompassing answer for all other gamers then I think your expectations were probably a little too high with this question.
Are you being intentionally dense?
I'm not asking you to literally speak on other people's behalf. I'm asking for an opinion for a solution. Let me provide an example. A person complains about air pollution. His suggestion for a solution is for everyone to stop driving cars, and instead to walk or use a bicycle. Regardless how good or bad of a solution that is, at least the person offers at least some suggestion for improvement.
When people shoot down every one of Epic's strategies, they do not seem to offer any ideas for better ones. That is not constructive criticism, that is just whining.
I think you fully understand the point I was making, so no need to mince words - it's anti consumer for the reasons I described. And I disagree that people do not criticize the publishers / developers. I have seen numerous devs and publishers get pretty well berated by gamers on various messageboards when news is announced of exclusivity. If you've researched this, I suspect you have as well, so I'm surprised to see you make this case. Epic gets criticized more because they initiate the bribe. We've seen a few instances where some devs have actually turned them down like the developer who made the game called DARQ.
I do understand what you mean, but I also suspect that you are aware you are using the wrong word, but keep using it because it makes Epic look worse. The other option is you really don't understand the difference. Just like people who refer to copyright infringement as theft.
The publisher criticism is basically limited to those whose games would have released on Steam initially, that is gamers were expecting a Steam release, and suddenly were told that the game would be a timed exclusive on Epic's store. In Phoenix Point's case, it was even more understandable, as Snapshot Games were the ones who went to Epic, not the other way round.
For games that were announced as an Epic exclusive to begin with, I remember no significant outrage. You can prove me wrong by proving links of course.
As far as DARQ's developer, I've already said (I believe also here on TPU) how I think his move was selfish and despicable. I would be happy to explain it again if necessary.
If Epic wasn't offering these bribes, or contracts as you say, the situations wouldn't occur.
And if publishers rejected the offers, the situations wouldn't occur. See? I can play this game as well.
Sure it is - and I'll even borrow something you said in post #16 - you were talking about GOG, but the same really applies here where you said:
"why would anyone leave GOG for Epic if they are already comfortable and used to with the former, and the latter offers nothing different?"
Not offering offline installers is anti-consumer? So Steam is anti-consumer now?
And that right there is why Epic is anti consumer - they offer the player no favorable reason to come to Epic, and use their locking out of other storefronts as a method of strongarming people to the storefront - they don't give the player incentive to come there because it's a good store, they try to take the choice away and favor business interests with contractual agreements (as you noted). And that is anti consumer.
Again, just because you don't explicitly benefit from something, doesn't make its absence anti-consumer. Is one of my local bakeries anti-consumer for not baking the type of bread I link that is available at a different bakery?
I guess I have to spell it out because I guess in your world everything is either pro- or anti-consumer. Well, there is an area between those two. Call it neutral. If you are neither benefiting nor being hindered by a Store, then it's in the middle area.
They don't give the player incentive to come there because it's a good store? OK, what would make it a good store? Offline installers and a better refund policy? Technically those are improvements, yes, and good ones. Would they be enough to make people switch over? No.
And yes, businesses favor their own interests over consumers'. This applies to every business, including Steam.
Here is Merriam Webster's definition of anti consumer:
: not favorable to
consumers : improperly favoring the interests of businesses over the interests of consumers
That is pretty vague. I'm a consumer, and spending money to receive a product is something I would consider not favorable to me. I would prefer to get products for free. So is every business on the planet anti-consumer then? Because all businesses favor their own interests over the customers'. It's how they function. Every entity favors their own interests over others', individuals, businesses, organizations, etc.
Of course it could be the word "improperly" that makes the difference in this case, but that can mean anything.
Simply the truth - the difference here is that, to my knowledge, Steam hasn't been bribing 3rd party publishers to make their games exclusive to Steam. And that's the only issue with exclusivity that I have with Epic and I suspect other players are in the same boat - it's when they are going out and writing a check to publishers to cut out other storefronts. I don't criticize them over games like Fortnite since it's a 1st party game, although I would prefer more companies follow CD Projekt Red's example with CP2077 where they released it at a bunch of storefronts instead of making it exclusive to GOG.
Steam doesn't need to "bribe" anyone. It is a juggernaut of a platform. I'm willing to bet money that if the roles were reversed, Valve would have adopted the same or a very similar strategy.
CD Projekt Red didn't release Cyberpunk 2077 on all stores because they love us, the gamers. They released it because on all stores because that would make them the most money.
Bottom line, with Epic's resources (I mean holy hell, they've dropped like a billion dollars on exclusives), you'd think they could have done some of the things we've discussed here to improve the store and offer actual real-life favorable things to get people to come there and not just try brute forcing people in there by cutting out better stores. I constantly see folks who just wait for exclusivity to end and buy the game somewhere else or just ride the high seas to get around what Epic is doing.
I agree that with the resources they have they could speed up the development and improvement. They are doing what they believe would be best for them in the long run.
What is also a bit funny to me is that many people who complain that Epic's launcher lacks features are also people who swear to never shop there for whatever reason. So why do they care that something is missing if they are boycotting anyway? And many of those that use the missing features as a pretense to not shop there, will switch to the exclusivity being the problem, should Epic actually add all of the functionality said users were missing. Have to keep an excuse on hand.