If you buy the disk then you own everything on it. They cant charge you extra money to unlock stuff on a disk you already bought? Thats just retarded.
>.>? oh? the steam version has Alice 1? interesting, but, since it was never advertised (and i looked) and it being $10 cheaper then the consul version that did have it, i saw it (the consul version W/ Alice 1) as the better buy.(due in no small part to what Alice 1 was/is going for o.o;yuval152 said:With alice:madness returns there was a DLC on the disc but it was origin exlusive(people on steam couldn't play unless editing the .ini file)Mr Pantomime said:Interesting. Ive actually never heard of on-disk DLC as a big thing. Do you have any examples?
Alice:madness returnsKitsuna10060 said:>.>? oh? the steam version has Alice 1? interesting, but, since it was never advertised (and i looked) and it being $10 cheaper then the consul version that did have it, i saw it (the consul version W/ Alice 1) as the better buy.(due in no small part to what Alice 1 was/is going for o.o;yuval152 said:With alice:madness returns there was a DLC on the disc but it was origin exlusive(people on steam couldn't play unless editing the .ini file)Mr Pantomime said:Interesting. Ive actually never heard of on-disk DLC as a big thing. Do you have any examples?
as for 'on disk' DLC, I'm against it, for the 'i paid for the disk, and everything on it why do i have to pay more to access everything now' reason.
now, not against DLC, its a wonderful idea, 'new content for a game i like, hells yes', but i see few company's using it wisely, from 'on disk' DLC which basically rips people off to half assed map packs that cost to much, weapon/armor packs that are pretty much worthless.
but give how industry tends to view gamers (ie: we're all pirates stealing from them) trying to get them to listen to reason would be better accomplished at gun point
Kitsuna10060 said:yuval152 said:Alice:madness returnsKitsuna10060 said:>.>? oh? the steam version has Alice 1? interesting, but, since it was never advertised (and i looked) and it being $10 cheaper then the consul version that did have it, i saw it (the consul version W/ Alice 1) as the better buy.(due in no small part to what Alice 1 was/is going for o.o;yuval152 said:With alice:madness returns there was a DLC on the disc but it was origin exlusive(people on steam couldn't play unless editing the .ini file)Mr Pantomime said:Interesting. Ive actually never heard of on-disk DLC as a big thing. Do you have any examples?
as for 'on disk' DLC, I'm against it, for the 'i paid for the disk, and everything on it why do i have to pay more to access everything now' reason.
now, not against DLC, its a wonderful idea, 'new content for a game i like, hells yes', but i see few company's using it wisely, from 'on disk' DLC which basically rips people off to half assed map packs that cost to much, weapon/armor packs that are pretty much worthless.
but give how industry tends to view gamers (ie: we're all pirates stealing from them) trying to get them to listen to reason would be better accomplished at gun point
If you still don't get it, its Alice 2 not 1.
Kitsuna10060 said:no!! really .....yuval152 said:Alice:madness returnsKitsuna10060 said:>.>? oh? the steam version has Alice 1? interesting, but, since it was never advertised (and i looked) and it being $10 cheaper then the consul version that did have it, i saw it (the consul version W/ Alice 1) as the better buy.(due in no small part to what Alice 1 was/is going for o.o;yuval152 said:With alice:madness returns there was a DLC on the disc but it was origin exlusive(people on steam couldn't play unless editing the .ini file)Mr Pantomime said:Interesting. Ive actually never heard of on-disk DLC as a big thing. Do you have any examples?
as for 'on disk' DLC, I'm against it, for the 'i paid for the disk, and everything on it why do i have to pay more to access everything now' reason.
now, not against DLC, its a wonderful idea, 'new content for a game i like, hells yes', but i see few company's using it wisely, from 'on disk' DLC which basically rips people off to half assed map packs that cost to much, weapon/armor packs that are pretty much worthless.
but give how industry tends to view gamers (ie: we're all pirates stealing from them) trying to get them to listen to reason would be better accomplished at gun point
If you still don't get it, its Alice 2 not 1.
-.- why thank you for pointing that out, when i was just to lazy to type it
^nail on the head. People feel entitled to it. I have no idea why, that train of thought makes no sense and is easily dismantled by the simple analogy that the OP used. But no, it's on the disk so they feel entitled to it. Admittedly, I think all day one dlc is a pretty dick move cuz it takes away from development time of the game, but on disk dlc is no worse than other day 1 dlc.imperialreign said:I think it stems more from this sense of self-entitlement most people have come to latch on to. There's a muddled way of thinking that goes: I bought the game, I own the game, I should have access to everything on the disk/included with the game, I can do whatever I want with the game.
. . . and as soon as someone hears they spent $60 on a game, only to find out there's some locked content they can't access, all hell breaks loose because they feel entitled to it.
No. You payed $60 for the experience of the game, as it was coded. That doesn't include locked dlc content. If you don't like it, and you don't think that the content is worth $60 without the locked content, then don't buy the game. The fact that you are willing to buy it, shows that the experience, as it was coded, without that locked content, is worth $60.buy teh haloz said:We paid 60 fucking dollars for the game. We are entitled to EVERY piece of content that is stored on the disk, and asking us to pony up more is simply put, extortion.
No. You payed $60 for the experience of the game, as it was coded. That doesn't include locked disk content, any more than it includes other dlc content, or the sequel. If you don't like it, and you don't think that the content is worth $60 without the locked content, then don't buy the game. The fact that you are willing to buy it, shows that the experience, as it was coded, without that locked content, is worth $60.TestECull said:Simply put, they're charging us for data we already have. That's bullshit, and it needs to stop.
I haven't bought a game so infected, but if I do, you can bet money I won't be buying any of the content I just bought. But I will use it. Because I bought the contents of that disc, and god damnit I'm going to use every single byte there.
Did I ever make any comment whether day one DLC as a whole is either good or bad? no I did not. I said that with day 1 DLC there is no disadvantage to it being on the disc as opposed to off... why must people keep twisting my words?Omey said:Ok. So far most of the people here disagree with the original poster and think DLC on day one is evil.
I understood you perfectly, I'm saying that that is amoral, illogical, and illegal, because you didn't buy the contents of the disk. The code, and all the information that makes the game work, is still the property of the company, that's why you can't just copy the disk and sell it to all your friends for $20. All you purchased was the game as it was coded. That doesn't include any of the content that is locked.TestECull said:I believe you misunderstood what I said.spartan231490 said:No. You payed $60 for the experience of the game, as it was coded. That doesn't include locked disk content, any more than it includes other dlc content, or the sequel. If you don't like it, and you don't think that the content is worth $60 without the locked content, then don't buy the game. The fact that you are willing to buy it, shows that the experience, as it was coded, without that locked content, is worth $60.TestECull said:Simply put, they're charging us for data we already have. That's bullshit, and it needs to stop.
I haven't bought a game so infected, but if I do, you can bet money I won't be buying any of the content I just bought. But I will use it. Because I bought the contents of that disc, and god damnit I'm going to use every single byte there.
I bought the contents of that disc. I will use what I have as I see fit. I do not care what the EULA says, I do not care what the publishers say, I do not care what the software itself says. If it's on the disc and I want to use it, I will use it, and I will not be paying for content I already fucking own!
My money, my rules, if the publishers don't like it they can sit on it and rotate. I'm not going to sit back and watch them nickel and dime me for content that's quite literally in my hand. Nope. Not gonna happen.
As for DLCs and sequels...I have no idea where you got those from, they're exempt from this rule since they're not on the disc I buy when I buy the original. Lonesome Road would be exempt because it doesn't come with a retail copy of Fallout: New Vegas. It's not on the disc when I buy that disc.
"Ford can't tell me what I can and can't do to my F150"TestECull said:Then why are you trying to tell me things that go against what I said?spartan231490 said:I understood you perfectly,
Lolwut? Amoral? The fuck? This just makes no sense at all.I'm saying that that is amoral,
What's illogical is bending over backwards for the big, lubed up dong the publishers are trying to force up one's hind end with shit like this. Logically, I bought that disc, I can and will do whatever the fuck with it and what's on it.illogical,
So is ripping your customers off, your point?and illegal,
I bought the disk, and that includes rights to a single copy of the contents. I can and will do whatever the fuck I want to with what's on it.because you didn't buy the contents of the disk. The code, and all the information that makes the game work, is still the property of the company, that's why you can't just copy the disk and sell it to all your friends for $20. All you purchased was the game as it was coded. That doesn't include any of the content that is locked.
Ford can't tell me what I can and can't do to my F150, nVidia can't tell me what I can and can't do to my 8800GS, Ruger can't tell me what I can and can't do with my 10/22 rifle, so why the fuck should game publishers get an exception?
Answer: They shouldn't, and they don't. Not from me anyways. If it's on the disk I will use it, and if the publsihers object, they can QQ me a river, build a bridge and get the fuck over it.
My computer, my rules. If I want to have a gunship killstreak in SP then god damnit I will.What you are saying is logically and morally equivalent to saying that because you bought Call of Duty: Black Ops, and because the disk has perks and killstreaks on it, you should be able to reprogram the disk so that you can use the gunship after a 1 "killstreak," or so you can play with all perks active at once.
As far as MP, that would qualify as cheating, which I wouldn't do. But then again I wouldn't play such a shitty game online in the first place so it's moot, and if it wasn't cheating and I wanted to do it there's nothing Activision can say or do to prevent it.
It's showing the same contempt to the publishers that they're showing to me. They want to fuck me over? I'll fuck THEM over! If it's on the disc I will use it as I see fit, and nothing you, the mods here or the publishers say can change that. I'm not renting that game, so they have no right to tell me what I can and cannot do with the content on that disc. If I want to modify the enemy NPCs to be giant walking wangs, I will. If I want to use on-disk DLC I will. My money, my computer, my rules. End of story. I'm simply not going to pay for something I've already paid for, it isn't going to happen.It's an illogical byproduct of a sense of entitlement that doesn't belong.
You might want to take the time to review the EULA with any title you've recently installed - contrary to belief, you DO NOT own what's on that disk in any way shape or form . . . all you're purchasing is a LICENSE to USE said media. It's been that way for nearly 30 years now.Rawne1980 said:Of course they are entitled to it.
I spend £40 on a game then I want whatever is on the disk. If I spend £40 on a game and find out I need to spend another £10 to unlock something on the disk then of course i'm going to be pissed.
Getting sick of seeing people use "entitled" without knowing what it bloody means.
How far back do you want to go? I can clearly remember the shareware days of the Amiga and C64/128 . . . I remember the golden age of PC gaming as well.Go back a few years. You bought a game and you get what you paid for. You buy a game now and then they try and milk you for more money. Being annoyed at that isn't feeling "self entitled" it's common bloody sense.
That argument you put up there has to be one of the worst i've ever seen.
See my above comment. You DO NOT own the game, nor a copy of it . . . you're only licesned to make use of one specific copy of the game. End of discussion.When I buy a game then I do own the game and after buying it on day one I damn well better have access to everything on the disk or i'm being ripped off.
Age has nothing to do with it . . . I'm part of the older gaming generation, and if I don't feel something is worth the amount the want to charge, I simply don't buy it or play it.The only people who are happy and don't complain about it are what I like to call .... mugs.
A mug is someone who will happily dole their cash out every which way they can.
I;m sorry to bring age into it but it does factor. Us "older" folks have come up buying a game and getting what we paid for so all this DLC bollocks does piss us off a bit. It's like were being used as cash fountains which is exactly how the publishers today view us. We're used to paying once for a game and thats it.
The younger generation don't mind all this DLC crap because it's become the "norm" for them it just isn't the "norm" for us and we'll never be happy about it.
And thats why I never purchase DLC outside of cheap as monkey nuts GOTY editions.
I beg to differ - the attitude you cast here comes across as "entitled" . . . it's the same attitude I've seen from players who don't want to spend $60 for a game, or the price of any purchase, so they pirate the game instead.Thats not feeling "entitled" thats being sensible. No game, and I mean no game is worth close to or over £100 which is what games today with DLC cost. Unless that game is going to give my wife a back rub while sucking me off then £100 is a complete waste of money.
It doesn't matter that I can afford it I have better things to spend my money on.