No they are not. The steroids were just a part of it. Steve learning to eat and train along with his consistency in working toward his goal at building his physique made the most difference. Give some twig boy or fat ass some juice and that alone will not come anywhere near transforming them into a competitive BB's body. The shit ain't magic, you don't just shoot some steroids and turn into superman. Many who are genetically challenged like to say this cause no matter what they do they will not build a physique anywhere near that.
I can see your point, but I think you don't quite grasp ours.
Having genetics that respond to juice is not an achievement. If you're seriously trying to fight to get kudos for that, forget it. It isn't going to happen. How many guys with big dicks get told "well done" by their contemporaries?
Most people here, natural, juiced or whatever eat a lot, work out a lot and live a bodybuilding lifestyle. None of us truly give two hoots about how committed you are to eating, sleeping or training. We do the same thing. Most of us don't get the results you get, either. We still do it. Nobody thinks steroids are magic juice, per se, but there probably aren't many here that wouldn't drastically improve by simply adding steroids to the mix.
What really amuses me about superjuicers is how they think they work far harder to get their muscles, far above the naturals. You're kidding yourselves. The singlemost determining factor in the difference (besides genetics) is steroids. All of us train. Do you really think you're going to get massive kudos for transformations photos that would have occurred (obviously genetics willing) for ANY of us, had we the genetics.
I don't want to trivialise what Steve has done, because it is good and dieting for comps is definitely a great achievement, above what your regular gymrat experience. But you're mostly talking to a lot of people who pretty much do the same thing, daily and get on with it.