there is a large number of games that you could easily run without steam that are on sale on it
It is quite telling that you fail to observe the huge paradox contained in this sentence
Apple and Google did their thing on mobile devices - I am not a fan of the application ecosystem on either of those platforms, but it is still a completely different situation compared to a desktop OS.
Apple does their thing on a Personal Computer too, besides what are "mobiles" these days but portable computers with touchscreens and operating systems? It`s not different at all and it just sounds like you`re shifting goalposts here.
Valve is a 3rd party who had a major stake in reviving a dying PC gaming market.
Ah, that ole chestnut. It`s a myth - unprovable feel-good tale. PC market was never dying, it was just in transition, facing terra nova in shape of digital distribution and direct console competition. But Sir Gaben arriving on the battlefield under H-L flag and saving the day sounds much better, I admit that.
They have been decently benign in their business approach, offline availability, ability to use codes from store-bought games, ability to use codes purchased directly from the developers, very decent developer income splits (small studios got a far smaller piece of the pie in the physical distribution days - as in more than ten times less). I haven't seen Valve do anything to secure exclusives. Of course they are not angels - and they have made dubious decisions, but the fact that they don't control the OS makes a world of difference.
Now, nothing personal here mate but this sounds like Walmart`s middle manager explaining to an investigative journo how his company is really good for everybody, nothing to see here. Unfortunately, it`s still spin. Store bought game has Steamworks on it anyway, accepting code from the dev means another Steam user for free (digital, eh), income splits are the lowest of all storefronts. They don`t control THE OS, but of course they tried to push out not only their own OS but hardware too. But these are details...most importantly, the elephant sits chuffed in the corner of the room: for a bit of convenience people signed off their right to the ownership of a product they paid for.
Disclaimer: even though it might seem so, it is not my aim to spark another pointless anti-status quo flame war. Been there, done that, the battle is lost, I moved under a big rock. And by no means am I defending MS here - their recent moves stink to high heaven. However, above examples demonstrate the strange, fascinating ways human beings can rationalise away and adapt the narratives to create some sort of safe haven...a defence mechanism, perhaps, still quite depressing though.
The bottom line is, sure, it`s okay to fire broadsides at current MS initiative - but if at the same time, for example, you don`t see the problem with the fact that the entire Internet (and more to come) is being progressively devoured by one huge advertising corporation then your perception is somewhat skewed, in my opinion.
But then, said corporation said once that they won`t be evil*, and also you can ride a scooter in the office if you work for them. So dunno, I might be wrong here
*actually,
they just dropped that pesky clause