I’d doubt that. Each publisher signs their own terms to Steam, and they likely couldn’t all be forced into a new agreement. It would reach to some new games, but it would likely lead many to consider other stores (considering a lot of them use Denuvo, piracy fears are likely high on their part).
If you want the process to be pervasive, you could either lobby on a major level like StopKillingGames, or push more popularity of indie games that tend to be DRM-free by default (oh, and if you think there’s a lot of them on Steam, check Itch.io)
I’d doubt that. Each publisher signs their own terms to Steam, and they likely couldn’t all be forced into a new agreement. It would reach to some new games, but it would likely lead many to consider other stores (considering a lot of them use Denuvo, piracy fears are likely high on their part).
If you want the process to be pervasive, you could either lobby on a major level like StopKillingGames, or push more popularity of indie games that tend to be DRM-free by default (oh, and if you think there’s a lot of them on Steam, check Itch.io)