Saw this problem with Tarkov.SoLong wrote: ↑ September 22nd, 2025, 13:28Yeah, and I'd never tell you otherwise. I was just explaining why I think Steam is the way it is.rusty_shackleford wrote: ↑ September 22nd, 2025, 13:25no, I want a platform without porn on it by defaultSoLong wrote: ↑ September 22nd, 2025, 13:24I mean, I'm forced to side with Trickster and Contrarian here Rusty. Banning tags is exactly what you're supposed to do to clean up unwanted content
I'm allowed to demand good things
Side note: you are correct that some games are tagged improperly. Those actually are removed or get tagged if they get reported enough or enough people add a particular tag.
It's annoying but it also means that most games are tagged correctly a few days after release.
Until your porn-free alternative exists, console yourself with this: Steam still having porn games means the feminists haven't succeeded in subverting Valve yet. So there's a silver lining.
In theory yes. But people can also downvote the hentai tag (most people would agree that the Witcher series isn't hentai), so it gets removed again.Finarfin wrote: ↑ September 9th, 2025, 11:56Doesn't the filter also affect games that get community labels? Like if a game like Witcher 3 gets the hentai tag often enough?

Unrelated to the thread but regarding Escape from Tarkov:
If you purchased the game during its early access phase on the Battlestate Games website for the Battlestate Launcher, and now a Steam version is released, do you expect or demand a Steam key for the game? Or do you understand that, since you bought it through their website for their launcher, you wouldn't receive a Steam key, as it was never promised?


