Valve has updated the shopping cart rules in their own Steam store. If you are a buyer, you will receive a license to the game, not the ownership rights.

Major debates have begun over this incident, so a new precedent will emerge. At Eurogamer, Valve added a warning to the purchase page when the Governor of California signed the new law "AB 2426." The law states that stores are required to indicate the exact nature of the purchase. In other words, you can't "just buy a product" as that would mean you are acquiring the product forever, specifically the ownership rights to the game. Therefore, according to the Steam user license agreement, a note has been added that buyers only obtain the right to use the game. So, if certain conditions are not met, the game can be removed from your library.

Steam library

The law will come into effect in 2025, but Valve has decided to implement it now. The text also includes exceptions for purchasing free games. If you want to buy a Steam account with a game at a low price, you can contact our store)

There's nothing wrong with this, nothing major in Steam's policy has changed. Now buyers will know exactly what they are paying for — which is even better)