Just wish they would make it so that I can choose which games I want to share and which not.
My mom would love to play some of my puzzle games, but rather not let her touch some of my other games since I know that would require me to help set stuff up, explain stuff, etc. which gets annoying fast!
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Hmm, there are a lot of open questions. Right now, I am not using any kind of family sharing. Though, if I would create a family, it would at best include my brother, sister and maybe my girlfriend. Is there a limit on adults in a family?
Also, how exactly is household defined? My family lives all in Germany but I am a few hundred kilometres away from them. Does this still count as a household in the family sense? Not that I think my brother and sister are actually playing a lot PC games.
For actual families with children in the same house, this is a great addition. For some what older people where the family may be at different places due to work and relationships, there are too many open questions to make a judgment. And for people abusing the current family library system, this will be a nightmare.
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Yea, there will certainly be some kind of colleteral damage, especially for families being at different places on the globe. I think it mainly depends on how Household will be defined and how far it can reach.
I think the update is a takedown in disguise on family share in disguise as well as an actual boon to real families. So, there will be winners and losers with the update. Waiting for more information on key questions.
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Sounds like a solid improvement for family household sharing.
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Honestly, for some of us, it will just become entirely useless. My family sharing circle are located across the globe, so I guess I won't be able to use this feature anymore :(
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Yeah, it's really sad for those of us in this situation. At least the people who aren't can enjoy more freedom ig...
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Apart from part where multiple users can play games from same library (ig currently you could use offline mode to bypass that but that would restrict from multiplayer games), and to add that when family owns multiple copies then same amount of family members can play together
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While a user in Maine can share a game with a sibling in Hawaii if you're located in a tiny country like Liechtenstein, Andorra or Malta you better keep your family close to you. But it's not about making families happy but to sell more games by imposing more restrictions.
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1 step forward, 2 steps backwards. Typical Steam "upgrade" as of late.
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Playing games at the same time is a step in the right direction, but single country restriction is dumb considering families can be split across countries and game licenses already have region restrictions implemented.
Also be careful with your testing. Once a person leaves your family they will get a 1 year cooldown on joining a new one. Also, if you had invited anyone for testing and they joined, disbanding the family would also lock you for 1 year from creating a new one.
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So after testing the beta last night I found the following
1) If only 1 person owns a game, and someone else is playing it, then the original owner can't play the game, doesn't even have an option to kick the other player (so this is annoying)
2) If you mark a game as private the following will happen
2.1) If you are the original owner: Then the game won't show for anyone else
2.2) If you are playing it off of someone else's library: Then it won't show in your activity feed at all
So if you have a new game, and want to make sure no one else can play it until your finished with it, then the best solution is to private the game until you're done with it
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Hmm. Answer to first: use mark as private. Ok but jokes aside probably Valve add "kick" option
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They did state that only as many licenses as there are bought can be played at the same time, so for two people to play the same game you'd have to have two licenses, aka buy the game twice, but it's good to know that you can private a game and not have it shared. This way if you want to play something and you're thinking about doing it next week and don't want to risk another family member playing it during that time, you can go ahead and make it private now, and start on it next week for instance. Working as intended I guess.
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https://steamcommunity.com/games/593110/announcements/detail/4149575031735702629
Long story short: you can create a new "family", add 5 people to it and all their libraries will be shared between each other and as long as number of people who want to play same game isn't bigger than number of copies bought, they can play it.
So, no need to go offline if you want to play your copy of Cyberpunk and someone else want to play your copy of Baldurs Gate 3. And now the 3rd person can play your copy of Life is Strange at same time as other person plays your BG3.
There's apparently some geolocking involved, but I had no problem adding family all over the city, I am guessing it might be country-limited?
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