Hello! We are excited to announce Steam Families is now available for all users. Steam Families is a collection of new and existing family-related features. It replaces both Steam Family Sharing and Steam Family View, giving you a single location to manage which games your family can access and when they can play. Create a Steam Family To get started, you can create a Steam Family and then invite up to 5 family members.
This was previously available as a opt in beta, but is now available for everyone.
No, not through Steam Families. Steam servers don’t host non-Steam games that you put in your library, it just launches the executable for you when you click play.
The catch is that many game publishers won’t release their games on GOG, or wait for several years after release before they start to sell it there.
Technically, Steam DRM is optional and any publishers who want to can sell their games through steam without any form of DRM. The game files are transferable, and you don’t need steam running or logged in to run the game. But most publishers don’t want DRM removed, and so it’s pretty rare.
No, many steam games use steam to verify if you own the game. It’s up to developers if they require their game to have steam drm or not.
If the game doesn’t have Steam DRM, you can just copy the game folder and run it anywhere. But many games will require steam (with an account that owns the game) to be running before they’ll open.
This might be a dumb question, but can you share non steam games that are in your library?
There’s no mechanism by which that could work.
Yes I know. The question was answered hours before you replied.
No, not through Steam Families. Steam servers don’t host non-Steam games that you put in your library, it just launches the executable for you when you click play.
That’s what I figured. Good call on the games not being on the servers, I didn’t think about that. Thanks
I think you can Steam Remote Play Together with non-Steam games, but that’s the only way to “share” them that I know of.
For GoG games, you could just send a family member a copy of the game you downloaded yourself i suppose
That’s why I love GOG. You actually own your game that you PAID for.
The catch is that many game publishers won’t release their games on GOG, or wait for several years after release before they start to sell it there.
Technically, Steam DRM is optional and any publishers who want to can sell their games through steam without any form of DRM. The game files are transferable, and you don’t need steam running or logged in to run the game. But most publishers don’t want DRM removed, and so it’s pretty rare.
Here’s a list of Steam games that have DRM disabled. There’s also a number of games that will run DRM free if you put a txt file with the game’s steam ID number in it.
You own the games on steam too. It’s the same thing, steam just has a front end with graphics.
Like I can take the .exe and install it on any other computer own them?
Yup. They’re just files. You’ll want to move the entire game folder for steam, the install file doesn’t come with the games.
I see, it makes sense as the game would have a bunch of dependencies that are all over that folder. Thank you, I didn’t know that.
No, many steam games use steam to verify if you own the game. It’s up to developers if they require their game to have steam drm or not.
If the game doesn’t have Steam DRM, you can just copy the game folder and run it anywhere. But many games will require steam (with an account that owns the game) to be running before they’ll open.