Kotor and Fallout don't have expansion packs. What's your point? You don't have one.Foolproof said:
Kotor and Fallout don't have expansion packs. What's your point? You don't have one.Foolproof said:
I want to believe that Moore is the more reasonable EA talking head, at least compared to the likes of DeMartini. But I have to note: I've never owned any of the devices he listed, and I'm still not at all pleased with the direction EA is going."I think people are worried gaming is going in a different direction than they were used to with N64, Sega Mega Drive, PlayStation and PlayStation 2," he said. "Everything was dominated by consoles. Pretty much everything was offline. You bought the game. You sat down. And you played the game until you got tired of the game. It was all on the disc."
Not to mention ever more blatantly. I mean, it is one thing to get mugged, but another all together to be mugged by a dude in a clown suit who then takes a dump on your shoes and says "I know you like it"...Olrod said:There, I fixed that quote for you, Mr. Moore.Grey Carter said:"I think people are worried gaming is going in a different direction than they were used to with N64, Sega Mega Drive, PlayStation and PlayStation 2," he said. "Everything was dominated by consoles. Pretty much everything was offline. You bought the game. You owned the game. You sat down. You owned the game. And you played the game until you got tired of the game. And you owned the game. It was all on the disc. That you owned."
You're welcome.
It's not that gamers "fear change" it's that they fear donkey-helmets like you trying to rip them off, which you seem to be doing more and more often these days.
Pretty much this. You saved me a lot of typing. Just want to add in that you owned a complete game, and not a game with tons of stuff locked out or cut out. And you didn't have to worry about servers being down locking you out of single player or having to instal spyware like SecuROM or Origin if you were going to play on PC.Olrod said:There, I fixed that quote for you, Mr. Moore.Grey Carter said:"I think people are worried gaming is going in a different direction than they were used to with N64, Sega Mega Drive, PlayStation and PlayStation 2," he said. "Everything was dominated by consoles. Pretty much everything was offline. You bought the game. You owned the game. You sat down. You owned the game. And you played the game until you got tired of the game. And you owned the game. It was all on the disc. That you owned."
You're welcome.
It's not that gamers "fear change" it's that they fear donkey-helmets like you trying to rip them off, which you seem to be doing more and more often these days.
Yes, that's what I expected from the title: some gamers don't like big changes, so we put out same-y sequels for those consumers.FalloutJack said:Wait, wouldn't yearly sequels of samey FPSs be considered a case of anti-change?4173 said:I thought this was going to be a reasonable defense of yearly sequels.
Silly me.
Hah, fooled you. That would've been almost rational. EA is too smart for a thought like that!4173 said:Yes, that's what I expected from the title: some gamers don't like big changes, so we put out same-y sequels for those consumers.FalloutJack said:Wait, wouldn't yearly sequels of samey FPSs be considered a case of anti-change?4173 said:I thought this was going to be a reasonable defense of yearly sequels.
Silly me.
I...Terminate421 said:![]()
EA having shitty PR and the public telling them they are evil while neither side gets anywhere
esperandote said:"You bought the game. You sat down. And you played the game until you got tired of the game. It was all on the disc."
The golden days.
I can't even believe how someone would say that trying to make it sound bad with a straight face.
...thank you for that clown imagery. >_>carpathic said:Not to mention ever more blatantly. I mean, it is one thing to get mugged, but another all together to be mugged by a dude in a clown suit who then takes a dump on your shoes and says "I know you like it"...Olrod said:There, I fixed that quote for you, Mr. Moore.Grey Carter said:"I think people are worried gaming is going in a different direction than they were used to with N64, Sega Mega Drive, PlayStation and PlayStation 2," he said. "Everything was dominated by consoles. Pretty much everything was offline. You bought the game. You owned the game. You sat down. You owned the game. And you played the game until you got tired of the game. And you owned the game. It was all on the disc. That you owned."
You're welcome.
It's not that gamers "fear change" it's that they fear donkey-helmets like you trying to rip them off, which you seem to be doing more and more often these days.
I was furious (still am) about the mandatory multiplayer in ME3. I don't have xboxlive and don't want it. Yes I know it wasn't "mandatory", but it was pretty hard to get the outcome you wanted with out it.
This one's better...theultimateend said:-CLOWNS!!-
...Except for the small detail that Steam doesn't rip law-abiding people off. Remember that.Frostbite3789 said:Seems like you should be railing harder against Steam than anything EA does on this front.Olrod said:There, I fixed that quote for you, Mr. Moore.Grey Carter said:"I think people are worried gaming is going in a different direction than they were used to with N64, Sega Mega Drive, PlayStation and PlayStation 2," he said. "Everything was dominated by consoles. Pretty much everything was offline. You bought the game. You owned the game. You sat down. You owned the game. And you played the game until you got tired of the game. And you owned the game. It was all on the disc. That you owned."
You're welcome.
It's not that gamers "fear change" it's that they fear donkey-helmets like you trying to rip them off, which you seem to be doing more and more often these days.
What you've said: "I don't like the state that this industry is in, thus, we should get rid of it entirely."viranimus said:I find it disappointing, sad and alarming that basically everything I would want to say in this thread, basically has been said, and still somehow it has to be said. If we understand what the problem is why have we not done anything to stop and repair this problem?
No EA it isn't people are afraid of change. Consumers are afraid of changes that diminishes them as customers, leaves them with less return on their investment, grants publishers unjust levels of rights over top of the consumer and gives license to decrease the expected degree of value on the products produced. Basically there is no good rational reason to justify changing products into subscriptions, licenses, services for the customer. The ONLY reason to do it, is to bypass consumer protections all together and frankly everyone knows it.
But yeah, go ahead EA, continue with the policy of blaming the people buying your products for your failings and the failings of the current model of the industry.
Honestly, it is time we pulled the plug from gaming. In the last decade we have seen nothing positive developed from online connectivity in comparison to the massive amount of consumer rape we have had to endure because of it. If people making games cannot use the tool responsibly, it needs to be removed from their toolbox. With great power comes great responsibility and its clear that responsibility has been neglected and ignored.
Pull the plug.
I'm all for citing academic journals but this is an issue with people getting banned from an online gaming platform, forum posts and blogs on gaming websites is about as good as it's going to get mate. A hacker getting a ton of people banned? A Dragon Age II ban that took a week to resolve? Getting banned because someone else swears at you? All coupled with pretty shit automated customer service is why I say again that I find fault with:animehermit said:First half of the links you provided were of the same story. Half again were forum posts not actually citing sources.NiPah said:-snip-
http://forums.electronicarts.co.uk/battlefield-3/1456285-banned-ea-support-banned-origin.html
http://forums.anandtech.com/showthread.php?t=2210668
http://www.destructoid.com/ea-will-ban-you-from-games-if-someone-else-swears-at-you-217219.phtml
http://www.destructoid.com/ea-forum-bans-are-still-locking-users-out-of-games-215767.phtml
http://www.destructoid.com/ea-accidentally-bans-player-from-dragon-age-ii-196272.phtml
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eKMCf-CQZxo
-snip-
Second, the next two sites you link to are about forum bans and Dragon Age II which were resolved within a week, players were able to play Dragon Age 2 less than a week later.
And lastly the BF3 bans were because a hacker had gotten a ton of people banned.
Don't let some weird EA persecution complex blind you from the faults EA has shown in their online gaming platform. I'm not some idiot who hates EA because it's what all the cool kids do, I have found some (IMO) pertinent faults in EA's Origin service and you seem hellbent on sweeping them under the rug with the other "day one DLC" and "Too many sequel" arguments.the seemingly ease at which people can be permanently banned from their game library