Visceral. One one hand there's Dead Space 2, but on the other there's Dante's Inferno, Dante's Inferno's ad campaign, and Dead Space 2's ad campaign...
I've been lurking recently. Those people want to lynch EA. 10% trolling DA2, 20% white knighting for Bioware, 20% like DA2, 30% don' like it, 10% hate DA2, 10% love DA2, and 100% curse EA for the short development time given to DA2. From what I've gathered. It is a mess and yet Mike Laidlaw is still trying to pass everything off as okay.Arontala said:Did you see what happened to the social Bioware forum the week that DA2 was released? It was the reason I started posting on the Escapist. All it was were people who hadn't even bought the game complaining about non-existent issues, people talking about how they wouldn't buy the game because they didn't like how the world map design looked, misinformation, etc. Eventually they just made a forum section where only people with registered games could post. Then, someone started a thread based on constructive criticism for DA2, and that's reached 56 pages of people discussing the game, and making comments on what should be improved. That thread is also a sticky.RedEyesBlackGamer said:I loved Bioware until recently. They have turned into prima donnas who cherry pick the parts of the community that they listen to. And that whole JRPG comment.
And even before that, Bioware wouldn't close down threads unless it dissolved into mere name-calling and insults.
OT: It's got to be squeenix for me, for reasons already listed.
I am to an extent. I think they have become quite arrogant. [http://www.strategyinformer.com/news/8006/bioware-you-can-put-a-j-in-front-of-it-but-final-fantasy-13-isnt-an-rpg] When one head honcho acts like a douchebag, I'll dismiss it. When multiple do it? I call foul.Arontala said:snip
In all of that, it doesn't really look like he actually said anything. You'll notice that he doesn't offer any objective comments, just "we're quite happy with [DA2]", "[DA2] keeps almost everything I want to keep about Origins". He never openly states.. well, anything. Just that they're happy with the game, which is really neither here nor there.RedEyesBlackGamer said:I've been lurking recently. Those people want to lynch EA. 10% trolling DA2, 20% white knighting for Bioware, 20% like DA2, 30% don' like it, 10% hate DA2, 10% love DA2, and 100% curse EA for the short development time given to DA2. From what I've gathered. It is a mess and yet Mike Laidlaw is still trying to pass everything off as okay.
"It's always valid. You have to take a read of what the fans are saying, what reviews are saying, and what the non-fans are saying. Are there people out there who are saying, "I could not play Origins, but love Dragon Age II" or "I couldn't play Origins and this is more of the same." You have to keep your ear to the ground. Look at forums. Take a look at what comments are coming up. What are the common concerns? What are the common perceptions? I think the big key is to not adjust 180 degrees again, because we've done this. I think, as a team, we're quite happy with what we've done with Dragon Age II, and this is establishing a solid foundation that keeps a lot, in fact almost everything I want to keep about Origins, but still has tons of room to grow and, frankly, a more viable future for the franchise. It's one that's more sustainable because we brought the world to a place that's inherently more interesting than "Yay, we beat the Blight. Good for us!"
The man is digging his own grave.
The whole interview. [http://www.gamespot.com/features/6305575/index.html]mireko said:In all of that, it doesn't really look like he actually said anything. You'll notice that he doesn't offer any objective comments, just "we're quite happy with [DA2]", "[DA2] keeps almost everything I want to keep about Origins". He never openly states.. well, anything. Just that they're happy with the game, which is really neither here nor there.RedEyesBlackGamer said:I've been lurking recently. Those people want to lynch EA. 10% trolling DA2, 20% white knighting for Bioware, 20% like DA2, 30% don' like it, 10% hate DA2, 10% love DA2, and 100% curse EA for the short development time given to DA2. From what I've gathered. It is a mess and yet Mike Laidlaw is still trying to pass everything off as okay.
"It's always valid. You have to take a read of what the fans are saying, what reviews are saying, and what the non-fans are saying. Are there people out there who are saying, "I could not play Origins, but love Dragon Age II" or "I couldn't play Origins and this is more of the same." You have to keep your ear to the ground. Look at forums. Take a look at what comments are coming up. What are the common concerns? What are the common perceptions? I think the big key is to not adjust 180 degrees again, because we've done this. I think, as a team, we're quite happy with what we've done with Dragon Age II, and this is establishing a solid foundation that keeps a lot, in fact almost everything I want to keep about Origins, but still has tons of room to grow and, frankly, a more viable future for the franchise. It's one that's more sustainable because we brought the world to a place that's inherently more interesting than "Yay, we beat the Blight. Good for us!"
The man is digging his own grave.
Summarized, it's "We're listening to the community, and we're also not listening to the community. We're not changing more things, and we're also not not changing more things." The only thing he seems to say is that the setting became more interesting. If there are other posts that make his opinion more clear, then sure, but this is just PR waffling.
But what's the JRPG comment? I've never read anything in the BioWare forum, so I must have missed it.
EDIT: I am way too slow.
[sub]I was going to compare him to a Dabus, but that was a Black Isle game..[/sub]