• @mlg@lemmy.world
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    1531 year ago

    Gaben already refused to sell to EA and made it abundantly clear that we would rather let valve die than go public.

    Microsoft also just recently said they’d buy Nintendo if they could.

    All this means is that Microsoft is filthy rich and still doesn’t know how to make an original quality game studio. They seem to overly rely on buying out studios and IPs that are successful to rake in more money.

    spoiler

    All of which reeks of an oligigopoly and reminds me of even worse companies like Oracle and AT&T

    • @SkyeStarfall@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      311 year ago

      The funny thing about selling valve, what would it even give for Gabe? He’s already filthy rich. What more could one want with more money?

      Saying no to selling only makes sense in his position, in my opinion. At least I personally would think so. Because then you still keep what is effectively your creation, and can use it to shape the world.

      At some point you really do just have enough money.

      • Cethin
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        171 year ago

        Well, the idea is you can do something else with the money instead of it being tied up with that company. You could start another venture if you want to. I’m pretty sure Valve is what he wants to be doing though, so starting a different company isn’t really something he’d want to do.

        • @greenskye@lemm.ee
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          131 year ago

          Even if he doesn’t want to run it, doesn’t mean it has to be sold to another company. It can just keep on being a private company with a new handpicked leader. There’s no upside to selling for Gabe. After he passes however… all bets are off.

          • @jcit878@lemmy.world
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            51 year ago

            depends who he passes ownership to. it could be a bunch of inheriters who have no interest in owning/running it and it will be forced to sell off to split shares out. or maybe he gifts it to a single person he sees as a successor. who knows, i dont know shit about his family so have no idea

            • OldQWERTYbastard
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              51 year ago

              I would trust Gabe’s judgement 100%. Dude runs one of the most pro-consumer companies in history. In doing so, he has built a fiercely loyal fan base by simply being good to his customers; not trying to squeeze them for every single cent.

              Gabe is a rarity; part of a bygone era of business owners and software engineers who truly care about their projects and want to build things that they themselves want to use and play. He’s a smart man and Valve has been his baby since he left Microsoft. He’ll make sure it’s in good hands when and if retirement comes calling.

            • @variaatio@sopuli.xyz
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              21 year ago

              third option is he sets up some kind of foundation or trust arrangement and testaments his shares to that trust, which is then run by board of trustees as per trust charter. Usually meaning “well board of trustees is entrusted to see to the continued profitable management of the company by selecting suitable new management as comes necessary” combined with possible whatever extra instructions there is as to how to and underwhat principles the company is to be run.

              Be it either private trust to benefit the descendants/described beneficiaries or a charitable trust with funds to be used for charitable causes.

              Family trusts aren’t that unheard of to exactly avoid the splintering of the ownership and thus risk take over bit by bit.

      • @variaatio@sopuli.xyz
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        11 year ago

        At some point you really do just have enough money.

        Well there is people to whom no amount of money is enough money. Not that it is at that point about, what you can do with that money. Rather by then the amount of money is a leader board and score board all to it’s own. The desire to be Forbes number 1 and then to be forbes number 1 with ever increasing lead to the number 2.

        However all indications are, Gabe Newell isn’t one of those people. He would have had plenty of opportunities to cash out and then do some other business dealings to get ever bigger score card number. Don’t really know exactly what else it would tell of him or his character, but the one thing we can pretty confidently tell is “it seems he isn’t about just singularly amassing ever growing pile of wealth as large as possible”. He would have had plenty opportunity to enrich himself way more aggressively and he didn’t.

    • @agent_flounder@lemmy.one
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      201 year ago

      Yeah where’s our antitrust enforcement?

      The oligopoly thing has definitely been fucking everything up for decades.