Always-on-DRM - why buy games with it?

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TheRaider

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Cry Wolf said:
Easton Dark said:
Good job to the people who say they don't care because they're always online anyway.

It's not like there are thousands upon thousands of gamers who are not so universally privileged who you are having these businesses fuck in the mouth. Don't care about them, or the future when (and not if) those servers go down.

I cringe when people say "My purchase means nothing", I laugh at "The company doesn't care", but I get angry, not angry like hit something, but consumer angry, when people support harmful business practices without thinking of what it could mean for others, because their 1 or 2 games of the dozens that came out that year just had to be purchased, or worse, purchased on a whim.
I support this message in it's entirety. It says everything the post/edit to my last post I was writing meant to say Thanks!
The company is costing themselves those sales. It is up to them if they choose to go for that market or not.

It is not uncommon for products to not be released in certain markets because of the complexities of that certain market.
 

BloatedGuppy

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Vegosiux said:
You seem to have mistaken genre for DRM.
Not really. GW1 was not an "MMO Proper". It had a group cap of...god...I want to say 8 people...any of which could get subbed out for bots, and the only time you were around a "massive" amount of players was in non-combat hubs like towns. It bore a much stronger resemblance to, say, Diablo II than something like Everquest or WoW. It was something of a genre tweener.

Vegosiux said:
This one has already been explained to you.
Not adequately it hasn't. The argument of "We the anti-DRM crowd get to tell you what games to buy or not to buy, and if you don't listen to us we have free reign to assassinate your character" is supported only by speculation. You are speculating about a grim future in which we get DRMed to death. This speculation can charitably be described as a slippery slope, and uncharitably be described as paranoia.

You cannot establish that A will necessarily follow B...that the purchasing of games featuring online DRM will automatically lead to its proliferation and the erosion of consumer rights. You can't. It's a future scenario, and it hasn't happened yet. There isn't even good anecdotal precedent to establish it, just the odd case here and there of an MMO shutting down or EA being dillweeds again. We heard this same Strang und Durm about the end of all things back when Steam was new (and believe me, new Steam was every bit as annoying as UPlay or Battle.net could ever hope to be) and that has turned out to be fairly tolerable. Yet we still have to sit around listening to talking heads bloviate about the imminent death of the hobby and boiling frogs and whispering the "First they came" poem in a stirring display of an utter lack of perspective.

I'll say again. You can make your own decisions about what to buy and what not to buy, for your own reasons. And those reasons are wholly your own. I don't ask you to make decisions in your life based on my values, and you would not appreciate it if I did. Your concerns about a hypothetical future scenario do not entitle you to run other people's lives, and they do not give you free reign to engage in cheery libel on an internet forum.

There are words to describe people so married to their cause or belief that they feel it is their privilege to attack anyone who does not share it. Rather than get to a point where we're chucking THOSE words around, why don't we all calm the fuck down and mind our business when it comes to who buys what?
 

Ambitiousmould

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Apr 22, 2012
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Neonsilver said:
TheRaider said:
People buy because they want to play the game more than the always on puts them off simple.
This and a boycott of a game doesn't really work,
a) because the companies will probably blame the low sales to something else than the DRM method and
b) prisoner's dilemma, it would be in the best interest if all gamers work together to get rid of always on DRM, but since you can't be sure that everyone is actualy helping, each individual has a better chance of a positive (at least being able to play a good game) outcome if he thinks only about himself.
I absolutely agree. Sure it would be nice if we all decided never to buy always on DRM, but that's never going to happen. Enough people will never boycott it all at once, and one or even one thousand people won't make a difference to a multi-million pound/dollar corporation, so there really is no point.
 

Vegosiux

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BloatedGuppy said:
Not really. GW1 was not an "MMO Proper". It had a group cap of...god...I want to say 8 people...any of which could get subbed out for bots, and the only time you were around a "massive" amount of players was in non-combat hubs like towns. It bore a much stronger resemblance to, say, Diablo II than something like Everquest or WoW. It was something of a genre tweener.
So the "online" component was DRM, or was it not DRM? Please, no "It could be seen as" or "From a certain point of view". A simple yes or no will do.

Not adequately it hasn't. The argument of "We the anti-DRM crowd get to tell you what games to buy or not to buy, and if you don't listen to us we have free reign to assassinate your character" is supported only by speculation. You are speculating about a grim future in which we get DRMed to death. This speculation can charitably be described as a slippery slope, and uncharitably be described as paranoia.
Have you ever seen me talking on behalf of "We, the anti-DRM crowd"? Actually, have you ever seen me use the "I get to tell you what to buy or not to buy, etc, etc, etc"?

You cannot establish that A will necessarily follow B...that the purchasing of games featuring online DRM will automatically lead to its proliferation and the erosion of consumer rights. You can't. It's a future scenario, and it hasn't happened yet. There isn't even good anecdotal precedent to establish it, just the odd case here and there of an MMO shutting down or EA being dillweeds again. We heard this same Strang und Durm about the end of all things back when Steam was new (and believe me, new Steam was every bit as annoying as UPlay or Battle.net could ever hope to be) and that has turned out to be fairly tolerable. Yet we still have to sit around listening to talking heads bloviate about the imminent death of the hobby and boiling frogs and whispering the "First they came" poem in a stirring display of an utter lack of perspective.
Hmmm. I recall what I said closer to "If you don't slap (metaphorically) people for doing A, chances are they will try to keep doing A, and that they're going to try and do A on a larger scale."

I'll say again. You can make your own decisions about what to buy and what not to buy, for your own reasons. And those reasons are wholly your own. I don't ask you to make decisions in your life based on my values, and you would not appreciate it if I did. Your concerns about a hypothetical future scenario do not entitle you to run other people's lives, and they do not give you free reign to engage in cheery libel on an internet forum.
Mhm, and you'll be kind enough to point out where I've tried to run other people's lives? Direct citations only, please, your personal interpretation of an ambiguous situation won't count, because after all, I am a better judge of what I was doing and thinking than you are, so my word on it naturally carries more weight than yours.

There are words to describe people so married to their cause or belief that they feel it is their privilege to attack anyone who does not share it. Rather than get to a point where we're chucking THOSE words around, why don't we all calm the fuck down and mind our business when it comes to who buys what?
By insinuating that I might be one of these people (because, why else would you bring it up?) you've already taken it to the point where THOSE words could start flying. So I will tell you what I told Draech. If you wish to insult me, drop the pretense and insult me directly. If you do npt wish to insult me, do not even insinuate.

Okay I haven't told him that second part, but it goes for him too.
 

BloatedGuppy

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Vegosiux said:
So the "online" component was DRM, or was it not DRM? Please, no "It could be seen as" or "From a certain point of view". A simple yes or no will do.
Define DRM. Whether an online component represents nothing but obtrusive DRM or a value add lies entirely in the eye of the beholder. Some people will tell you they are excited about, say, SimCity's multi-city system, whereas others will tell you it's a thin veil of game play masking a sinister DRM plot.

So, was Guild Wars "always online" requirement a form of DRM? In exactly the same way Diablo 3 and SimCity's "always online" requirements were, yes.

Vegosiux said:
Hmmm. I recall what I said closer to "If you don't slap (metaphorically) people for doing A, chances are they will try to keep doing A, and that they're going to try and do A on a larger scale."
That is a slippery slope. Remember when I said "it's a slippery slope"? You don't need to repeat the slippery slope. We've already established what's going on there. That slope is not getting any less slippery, so let's just put it to one side for now. We can both see the slope. We've both acknowledged the slope. Look, there it is! We can be done with it now. There's nothing more than can be added, really.

Vegosiux said:
Have you ever seen me talking on behalf of "We, the anti-DRM crowd"?
I had a longer response to all this written out, but it was getting pretty fucking snarky, so I'm going to dial it way back because in all honesty you are correct. You are relatively moderate on this issue, and I've gotten to the point where my annoyance level has me throwing wild punches. We're WAY down the highway of opinion polarization on this topic, now. A year ago I was faintly anti-always online DRM despite being always online, because it seemed like a pretty transparent shady tactic. Now, after a year of enduring a nigh bottomless parade of insults and demands, I'm half tempted to write letters begging for always online DRM in everything just to piss people off. The ridiculously inflammatory rhetoric, the non-stop name calling, the extraordinary self-aggrandizement...it's gotten me to the point where I'm almost liking always online DRM for the stupid reason that the enemy of my enemy is my friend.
 

Nazulu

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Draech said:
Vegosiux said:
Draech said:
Ok I am just a drug addict because I have a good internet connect. Solid logic right there. Yeah I am in denial because it doesn't bother me as much as you.
You know, just because I "can" always be online doesn't mean that I "want to" always be online, nor does it mean I "am supposed to" or "should" always be online.

Do you seriously think the always online DRM complaints come just from people with shoddy internet?
I think the most legitimate ones come from them. Most others are doing it on principle. Here is the thing. Should and could is completely irrelevant. Guild wars could have been made with an online and an offline component. It was made full online so that is the product I dealt with. Not with an imaginary one. And the online part didn't bother me.
Is this another game completely built around multiplayer with gigantic area's with a map that keeps expanding (some actually fitting in 200 people to fight a big boss) and lots of skills and quests for team work? Otherwise it's going to fall flat just like your other argument since the game didn't started off small and just suddenly become a series that wanted to be multiplayer. Even when playing an MMO I get my fair share of lag and hiccups that kick me out, and my connection couldn't be any better.

Draech said:
It is about what you want. I already have what I want. I spend my money on it.
"I've got mine, so fuck you." Yeah, a lot of people I meet have such an attitude.
Tell me more about how you stopped buying Xbox games because I dont have an Xbox. Its a shitty additude of "I've got mine, so fuck you". Listen the day you put in a 38 hour work week instead of me then you get to tell me where those money goes. Until then you dont get to dictate how I spend my money so you can get games the way you like.

Stop acting like my purchasing decisions oppress your freedoms. Unless you are a child laborer in china then get over yaself.
Coming from someone who supports dictators that keep making things less convenient and couldn't give a damn what the opposition thinks.

Your purchasing decisions do oppress freedoms! You decided to support this crap with your wallet along with many others and that's what makes the publishers or whoever fbelieve they can get away with it. 2 + 2 = 4.

I'm glad this bothers you cause you obviously can't get over it.

Draech said:
You just want me to not get what I want so you can have what you want, and decide where I spend my money.
Wait, you don't want games without always online DRM? (Because that's the only way this can make any sense)

Oh, wait a second...

Right, I walked right into this one again.
I live in reality where games are what is available and not warped after what I want them to be. You see... not buying the new Sim City will not make another appear in a puff of smoke without an online DRM. And you seem to have mistaken "not caring about DRM that doesn't affect me" with "Liking always online DRM". Well I know it is hard to get your head around it, but it is really quite simple. I dont care the DRM is there.... because it doesn't affect in any meaningful way.... so it wont affect my purchasing decisions in any meaningful way.
Yes because no else lives in reality, the reality where people make sacrifices so they can improve the future. And we know you don't give damn what other people care about, that's why you're always defending yourself and the businesses at every turn.

I can't take you seriously at all. You once told Dexter to look at EA with out looking at them as a villian, well maybe you should try and understand why people are so against this DRM. Instead of always biting back, consider why people are so pissed off about it instead telling us "because it won't effect your game in any meaningful way". The whole fucking point is it can, and for many people it will. Most (possibly all) people who decide not to support this are considering others, who make a stand against being forced to follow more rules, because they want whats best for every one. And for some fucked up reason you feel it's necessary to spit on us at every chance you get.

I'm not sure you know but most people can not express their feelings properly, so the aggresion is always going to be around. You on the other hand keep saying you don't care (even though I don't believe it), and there is a lot of words that describe that attitude. I wouldn't normally bother talking to you, but this isn't just for you.
 

klaynexas3

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From what I've been able to make out, there is(correct me if I'm wrong) only one game that currently uses always on DRM. There are a few that may have tried it or a few that use regular DRM, but regular DRM, while annoying, isn't extremely detrimental, especially if used properly. So we currently have one game which this discussion can revolve around, and yet there are so many that just want to demonize those that really just don't care. And even then, that one game has some legitemate reasons for it. There is always a risk to buying things, and that is because nothing can last forever. And in the end, if a game does go down that was run on servers, it's easy to pirate and so many people(if it was good) would even run a private server solely for the reason to play it. Look at Phantasy Star Online. If it's about the fact that not everyone has internet, then the people who don't have it won't buy it, and that will affect sales, thus making the company realize the mistake. If it's about the fact that it will go down in 10 years, I already addressed that. If you're using the slippery slope arguments, don't try. Come up with another argument and I'll listen to the argument. No promises about buying it, but I'll listen to those, but I will not listen to a slippery slope one, as they rely too much on the idea of "if." I don't care about "if," I only care about hearing about the "will."
 

Signa

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Nazulu said:
I can't take you seriously at all. You once told Dexter to look at EA with out looking at them as a villian, well maybe you should try and understand why people are so against this DRM. Instead of always biting back, consider why people are so pissed off about it instead telling us "because it won't effect your game in any meaningful way". The whole fucking point is it can, and for many people it will. Most (possibly all) people who decide not to support this are considering others, who make a stand against being forced to follow more rules, because they want whats best for every one. And for some fucked up reason you feel it's necessary to spit on us at every chance you get.

I'm not sure you know but most people can not express their feelings properly, so the aggresion is always going to be around. You on the other hand keep saying you don't care (even though I don't believe it), and there is a lot of words that describe that attitude. I wouldn't normally bother talking to you, but this isn't just for you.
I need to thank you for this post. I lost my temper so I didn't post back, and it's nice to see someone say what I was thinking with a level head.

klaynexas3 said:
From what I've been able to make out, there is(correct me if I'm wrong) only one game that currently uses always on DRM.
I'm not going to look for a complete list, but you certainly are wrong. Sorry. Just off the top of my head, every Ubisoft game since Assassin's Creed 2 has had the online DRM. Blizzard joined in with Starcraft 2, but they did offer some offline options. Before all that, EA was going down an awful slope that I started boycotting them. They added limited installs to games like Mass Effect and Spore, and now they are doing always online too. It would be unfair of me to not mention that some of the games had some of their restrictions relaxed, but I can't be bothered to keep up on all of them. I just know it took me about 9 months to uninstall Mass Effect because I didn't want to lose the installation, and there was no revoke tool that I could use.
 

klaynexas3

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Signa said:
klaynexas3 said:
From what I've been able to make out, there is(correct me if I'm wrong) only one game that currently uses always on DRM.
I'm not going to look for a complete list, but you certainly are wrong. Sorry. Just off the top of my head, every Ubisoft game since Assassin's Creed 2 has had the online DRM. Blizzard joined in with Starcraft 2, but they did offer some offline options. Before all that, EA was going down an awful slope that I started boycotting them. They added limited installs to games like Mass Effect and Spore, and now they are doing always online too. It would be unfair of me to not mention that some of the games had some of their restrictions relaxed, but I can't be bothered to keep up on all of them. I just know it took me about 9 months to uninstall Mass Effect because I didn't want to lose the installation, and there was no revoke tool that I could use.
I'm saying always on DRM, and in this current day. The Assassin's Creed new games and StarCraft 2 require that online activation, but past that you can play offline, and while I can't be absolutely certain, I feel like Mass Effect is the same, but again I could be wrong. I wouldn't know with Spore. Diablo 3 I can only somewhat understand with the auction house.

I have nothing wrong with standing up for what you believe in, and some games *cough*new Simcity*cough* really have no reason to be always online, but what I am getting tired of is the idea that others are terrible people for buying these games. They obviously find enough redeeming values in it to continue playing, and some actually do weigh out everything, including the risk of losing the game for good, and they still think the content is worth all that hassle.

I am also tired of "AAA" game companies being related to as dictators and such, as though they have total control over gaming. There is the indie game market, which can sometimes have games a thousand times greater than any AAA game. The big "AAA" companies don't control the gaming industry as much as people tend to think, so just because the bigger names might start using always on DRM, doesn't mean the death of gaming. And in the end, the one thing which pisses me off most, is that so many people forget that games are not just a product. They are an art form. Anyone can make a game if they try, so if you or anyone else want to see the next great game, casting your votes with your wallet is not the only way to make it happen. It can do something, don't get me wrong, but it's not the only thing you can do.

I can't say that I view all DRM as a bad thing, the only one that I find to be crap is always on in a single player game. Anyone can do a one time activation; even if they don't have internet at home, there is always somewhere else you can go to do the activation, such as a library. The always on, however, does cut off anyone without internet from playing. If we see internet as a service becoming free like it was mentioned in an article here a few days(maybe weeks, I have little perception of time), then it will become a bit more grey(though only a little), but until then, there is little to no reason for it.
 

Nazulu

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Draech said:
Nazulu said:
Draech said:
Vegosiux said:
Draech said:
Ok I am just a drug addict because I have a good internet connect. Solid logic right there. Yeah I am in denial because it doesn't bother me as much as you.
You know, just because I "can" always be online doesn't mean that I "want to" always be online, nor does it mean I "am supposed to" or "should" always be online.

Do you seriously think the always online DRM complaints come just from people with shoddy internet?
I think the most legitimate ones come from them. Most others are doing it on principle. Here is the thing. Should and could is completely irrelevant. Guild wars could have been made with an online and an offline component. It was made full online so that is the product I dealt with. Not with an imaginary one. And the online part didn't bother me.
Is this another game completely built around multiplayer with gigantic area's with a map that keeps expanding (some actually fitting in 200 people to fight a big boss) and lots of skills and quests for team work? Otherwise it's going to fall flat just like your other argument since the game didn't started off small and just suddenly become a series that wanted to be multiplayer. Even when playing an MMO I get my fair share of lag and hiccups that kick me out, and my connection couldn't be any better.
Ah a gigantic map made around teamwork.... that puts in bots and shards the map so you are alone there anyway....

And plays 5v5 team pvp matches on premade chars that could have been done in LAN. After its not like they allow you to instant make max lvl chars to do arena fights.... oh wait they do.

Tell me did you read Guild Wars or Guild Wars 2 because someone missing something fairly significant.
Let me make this clear. It's less of a sin when the series started off on this note than just suddenly changing to online only. I never bought Guild Wars for many reasons, but the game does change in area's and how it brings people together.

Draech said:
Draech said:
It is about what you want. I already have what I want. I spend my money on it.
"I've got mine, so fuck you." Yeah, a lot of people I meet have such an attitude.
Tell me more about how you stopped buying Xbox games because I dont have an Xbox. Its a shitty additude of "I've got mine, so fuck you". Listen the day you put in a 38 hour work week instead of me then you get to tell me where those money goes. Until then you dont get to dictate how I spend my money so you can get games the way you like.

Stop acting like my purchasing decisions oppress your freedoms. Unless you are a child laborer in china then get over yaself.
Coming from someone who supports dictators that keep making things less convenient and couldn't give a damn what the opposition thinks.

Your purchasing decisions do oppress freedoms! You decided to support this crap with your wallet along with many others and that's what makes the publishers or whoever fbelieve they can get away with it. 2 + 2 = 4.

I'm glad this bothers you cause you obviously can't get over it.
WoW It oppresses freedom!
Tell me more off how you have to buy this. No wait you dont.

What you have mistake there is "freedom" for "getting everything you want". What is next? I cant buy the game because it cost 50$ and you only want to pay 40$? Me buying it for 50$ will oppress the freedom of those who want to buy it for 40$ bla bla bla.

How about you get a second and actually tell me about all that freedom you get oppressed.

Its quite simple. They have a product. I made a cost/benefit analysis and I decided that always online DRM doesn't affect my product enough to influence my decision. And yes I did care how it influenced you and the rest of the world. But since there is no actually civil right being oppressed here I dont care that you dont like it.
That's really bad argument you have there. It has nothing to do with my choice in buying it or not, it's about how DRM keeps getting thrown into new games. It's about trying to make it available to every one with out having to be treated like the problem. Believe or not, there are a lot of people that don't like being treated like the problem, and I'm sure the people who can not play this game would love to give you a hug. Just like you, every one wants to be able to play all the games, and is it too much to ask with out fuss?

I get the feeling you've somehow convinced yourself that DRM issues doesn't matter when comparing to other problems. Why do you have to compare? Should we just ignore every thing you're OK with just because you only care about other problems? You don't think it gets worse? Well it seems they might have a similar DRM on the next Xbox, hopefully not. Oh it can get worse, it's a fair prediction to make.

You don't give any one any reason to give a damn what you think. You keep saying you don't care, you don't care, you don't care, you don't care, you don't care, you don't care, you don't care, you don't care, you don't care, you don't care, you don't care, you don't care, you don't care, that's your whole fucking argument along with some poor comparisons. We know you don't bloody care, but if you think you can get away with saying that your purchase doesn't have an effect then you're full of it. Oh and you will care when some thing happens to your internet or they decide to take it a step further.

Draech said:
Draech said:
You just want me to not get what I want so you can have what you want, and decide where I spend my money.
Wait, you don't want games without always online DRM? (Because that's the only way this can make any sense)

Oh, wait a second...

Right, I walked right into this one again.
I live in reality where games are what is available and not warped after what I want them to be. You see... not buying the new Sim City will not make another appear in a puff of smoke without an online DRM. And you seem to have mistaken "not caring about DRM that doesn't affect me" with "Liking always online DRM". Well I know it is hard to get your head around it, but it is really quite simple. I dont care the DRM is there.... because it doesn't affect in any meaningful way.... so it wont affect my purchasing decisions in any meaningful way.
Yes because no else lives in reality, the reality where people make sacrifices so they can improve the future. And we know you don't give damn what other people care about, that's why you're always defending yourself and the businesses at every turn.

I can't take you seriously at all. You once told Dexter to look at EA with out looking at them as a villian, well maybe you should try and understand why people are so against this DRM. Instead of always biting back, consider why people are so pissed off about it instead telling us "because it won't effect your game in any meaningful way". The whole fucking point is it can, and for many people it will. Most (possibly all) people who decide not to support this are considering others, who make a stand against being forced to follow more rules, because they want whats best for every one. And for some fucked up reason you feel it's necessary to spit on us at every chance you get.

I'm not sure you know but most people can not express their feelings properly, so the aggresion is always going to be around. You on the other hand keep saying you don't care (even though I don't believe it), and there is a lot of words that describe that attitude. I wouldn't normally bother talking to you, but this isn't just for you.
And again we get the self entitled whining.

You dont like EA games therefore I shouldn't like them out of solidarity.

Trying to make this into a big civil rights issue where you want a better future while completely missing the point that I am not in a horrible present. I am quite alright with the deal.

Here is the deal mate. I get you dont like it. So therefore you shouldn't buy it. Actually you could buy I. Do whatever. your money your business. Trying to make it into this self entitled civil rights issue that doesn't exist and then running char assassinations on me because I spend my money on something that treats you the same way as me and YOU dont like it.

Get over yourself.
And here again you're missing the point. You like to twist every thing and make assumptions as well. Once again, you give me no reason to respect you.

Want to explain how I'm self entitled? Oh, you were using that as an insult because I've some how offended you. This is just more spitting and it means fuck all coming from you.

So you don't have to repeat your boring arguments let me make this clear. I never said what you have to like or don't have to like. However, you are voting with your wallet, and I am as well. Therefore there is a confliction, so repeating the same shit about how you buy what you like doesn't mean a fucking thing to me. You don't like that I don't agree your purchase is good, GOOD!!! That's the whole fucking point! I don't care what you call it but it's no going away because you wish it would. You voted for it, therefore your helping it, therefore your part of it. Nothing is going to change that until you decide not purchase, is that clear? You must feel some thing since you can't just let this go

So you can either repeat yourself and insult me some more, or you could ignore it, or you can think about it. Either way you are officially part of it and we will still disagree with your purchase.
 

EtherealBeaver

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AntiChri5 said:
Sam is denying himself something he wants because it will cease to function in ten years. Which is utterly senseless.
That is a horrible argument unless you think its okay that clothes fall apart a week after purchase. You can expect organic things to decay, not mechanical things. And if the mechanical thing breaks, you can expect that it will be fixable, either by yourself or in a workshop. You cant do that with always-on-drm

PH3NOmenon said:
But by that argumentation, you are effectively moving consumer care and planning from being the responsibility of the company to being the responsibility of the consumer itself. Basic commercialism tells us that if companies can make more money doing something, they will and if they realise that they can give even less care about the consumers than they already do "because they will try and fix it themselves" then what incitament would they have to have enough servers or customer support at all? Is this not just inviting the companies to remove even more of the support than they alredy did?

Woodsey said:
It's not that surprising that support has ended for an 8 year old game.
If they arent going to support a game they sell why sell it at all then? It would be like selling an old car without the motor and refusing to answer questions about the motor because "its old".

A game which doesnt function is a product which doesnt function. The company selling the product should never have a kill switch for a product because its the consumers right to decide when they are done with said product just like it is the consumers responsibility to take care of their own product if they want it to continue being in a functional state.

If the company stopped selling Deus Ex 2 then I can accept that they wont offer support for new sales of the game. The fact that they are still selling it however makes it my right to expect the game to actually work and if it doesnt, help to make it work.
 

Elijin

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Remember the good old days, where a company would more than likely be prepared to do something like release one last patch removing the always on DRM when they chose to discontinue their support?

Also there's the whole subjective value issue. People can feel the price they paid for owning the game for a few years, given suitable play time, is worthwhile to them.

Trying to paint it as black and white 'You're the consumer so thats that' misses that you're the consumer and you make purchases based on your situation at time. And this medium is not something people view as a long term investment, and as such isnt given that consideration. Sure when you buy a house or a car, you consider the lifetime of the product, but when you buy a videogame you look at it as a short term satisfaction, and then in your later years if you find you still have it, you are pleasantly surprised. Hell even DRM aside, the tech rush and 'next best thing' craze often means older products get disregarded anyway.
 

Nazulu

They will not take our Fluids
Jun 5, 2008
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Draech said:
"but the game does change in area's and how it brings people together"
And so does the new Sim City.
It doesn't matter about previuse incarnations for this part of the argument. If the always online aspect affect how it bring people together before it will here as well.
Is there a downside? Yes
Is there an upside? Yes

Just making it clear.
And what I'm making clear is changing a series all of sudden to multiplayer is still bullshit, and just because other games have gotten away with it, doesn't mean it's suddenly OK.

Draech said:
No

I have not "somehow convinced yourself that DRM issues doesn't matter when comparing to other problems".

The fact is DRM doesn't matter TO ME. As it turns out the only guy I care about when I am going around and spending MY MONEY is me.

You are going on saying "treated like the problem" but forgetting the important part of that sentence "that it is to me".

I am going to take your argument to its logical conclusion. I have a powerful PC. I bought it and put it together and I like it. When I go out buying games for it I will be getting games with very high system requirements. By doing so I affect the market by making games demand more of the system. Now someone else dont have a high Power PC. And is now calling me a "drug addict" or a "corporate shill" (both have been used in this thread already) for moving the market into an area that is a problem for him, but not for me. Am I supposed to take his problems with the product into consideration when I spend my money?

Well I would if his problems were significant enough. But as it is now it is just him being denied a luxury (and in the case of DRM not even a financial circumstance. Just personal principle). Now am I going to deny myself the use of my money in order to consider a problem he has? A problem that in the case of DRM often is self imposed?

Would it be fair for me to call you a "drug addict" for eating meat if I was a vegetarian?
Oh look, you're reapeating yourself. I never would have predicted that.

It seems I can't make it clear to you that it doesn't matter how many times "it works for me" or how the weak comparisons doesn't mean shit. We still don't agree with your purchase and we believe you are helping the problem we're against, you are voting with your wallet remember. And incase you don't understand why we do it, it's because we believe the DRM is unfair no matter how many times you call us entitled or some other bullshit defence.

If you were a vegetarian arguing how I'm a drug addict for eating meat and you actually had a strong point, then I would think about it. I would stop eating meat if it helped saved a species or something. Just like we are against games having DRM so no one has to put up with it.

Draech said:
No I call you self entitled because it sounds like you think you have a right to play games without DRM. You dont have a right to do that, you have the luxury of doing that.

You know what the difference is between you and me on this subject. One of us is prosecuted for his purchasing decision.

One of us gets blamed for the downfall of gaming. The other one quite literally said "your money, your business".

You repeatedly beating me over the head with this bullshit and then going "nothing is going to change until you change your mind!" then try to walk off with your head held high in some sort righteous crusade.

Ill end on your last sentence
"we will still disagree with your purchase."
And that matters how since its mine and not yours?
*sigh* You repeated that same thing here too. I can't believe what I'm reading.

I don't buy games when they have DRM because I don't want DRM. I have the right to do that don't I? Or it doesn't matter what I believe because no matter what, if I'm against DRM then I'm entitled? I don't think you even read what you write.

So you feel offended that we don't like your purchasing decision and that you're apart of it. Get over it like you say. I really thought I made it clear, I can't believe I have to repeat myself. YOU ARE VOTING WITH YOUR WALLET WHETHER YOU THINK SO OR NOT! You can call it righteous crusade or use insults or what ever but it doesn't mean shit because you support it and we're against it.

I'm amazed you even sent me this. It seems you can't fathom why you're helping DRM. I didn't even say any thing as dramatic as the 'downfall of gaming'. I reckon you think about your next purchase before supporting DRM, or should just leave if you can't handle the thought that someone is against your train of thought.
 

PH3NOmenon

New member
Oct 23, 2009
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EtherealBeaver said:
If they arent going to support a game they sell why sell it at all then? It would be like selling an old car without the motor and refusing to answer questions about the motor because "its old".
You make it seem like that doesn't happen for cars. There's still people buying cars that are essentially unfixable if and when they break. If people know about it up front, then there really isn't an issue. It only becomes a problem when it's hushed up.

EtherealBeaver said:
by that argumentation, you are effectively moving consumer care and planning from being the responsibility of the company to being the responsibility of the consumer itself.
Myeah, I think I see the issue here. In my opinion, the consumer is responsible for making informed purchases. The whole notion that they shouldn't be leads to those silly warnings on products: "Do not insert into eyes." on a pair of scissors or the like.

Any game with always on drm has a big sticker on it proclaiming it as such. I am well aware of the risks involved and I am comfortable with them (from large companies, at least). I know the car, if and when it breaks down, might not be repairable. I know that at certain times, the dealership may decide I can't drive the car right now. I know that the dealership will know at all times where the car is. Hell, I might even be forbidden from reselling the car. I know all of that. And I still decide to purchase the car, because in my life my car isn't that important to me and I deem the expense to be reasonable for what I get in return for it.

I respect anyone for not buying always-on-drm games. Vote with your dollar. I will vote with mine.


Do I like always on drm? Not really, no. (I enjoy steam's convenience though.) I just don't dislike it enough to actually alter my purchasing behaviour. Not yet, anyway.
 

TreuloseTomate

New member
Oct 25, 2012
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These publishers only speak one language: Money.
If you buy a game with always-online DRM, you are telling them that you are ok with that. If SimCity doesn't sell well, EA will notice. If it does sell well, however, what they won't notice are the complaints and discussions on the internet. Ok, they might notice that, but why would they care? They'll already have our money.

The problem is that they can push this form of DRM with big names like Diablo 3, SimCity and other AAA titles. We waited over 10 years for an overhyped Diablo 3, we don't care about anything anymore. Just wanna play the game. OMFG D3 is here! Must buy limited 100$ pre-order edition with extra shit I don't need! Because it's fucking Diablo! Blizzard! Well, it's not Blizzard anymore. It's Activision. Then the game turns out to be buggy, unfinished and we can't even play the singleplayer mode as a pre-order customer, because their servers can't handle the traffic. But we take it anyway, despite there being Torchlight 2 which is basically a consumer-friendlier version of Diablo 3 for 20$. That's how they fool us.

I'm not aware of any alternative for SimCity. That game looks pretty amazing, imho. But I won't buy it. I can't buy it, because I'm not ok with their DRM and business practices.
And if there is no other similar game avaible, tough. I'm not that desperate.
 

Adam Jensen_v1legacy

I never asked for this
Sep 8, 2011
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A couple of questions for these always-on DRM apologists. Are you OK with not being able to play the game that you bought with your hard earned money when you want if your connection is down or when the servers are down? Are you honestly OK having to depend on others to tell you when you can use what you payed for? And do you honestly think it's not a consumer rights issue? You see, that is an excellent example of corporate brainwashing. Congratulations. That kind of mindset is exactly what's wrong with this world. You deserve no respect.

I also noticed something. These always-on apologists are often the same people who believe what the companies told them about paying for a license instead of an actual product. So they're OK with being told that they don't own what they bought. They're OK with paying for nothing. And they are also often the ones who don't realize that EULA is not a legally binding document, and also it's filled with anti-consumer clauses that are illegal in most European countries. Pathetic.

The companies aren't the biggest problem here. It's the people who fall for these anti-consumerism money making schemes over and over again for decades now.

I just can't understand how someone can defend a system that is rigged directly against them. How hard is it for you to understand that these companies aren't using always-on DRM because they want to help the customers. They want to help themselves. And whenever a company wants to help itself you can bet your ass it means that you're going to suffer for it somehow.