I disagree. I feel early access is a combination of Fools gold and in this case misguided gamers looking to combat real business practice problems like AAA early access or mobile FTP schemes.
Why 'fools gold'? Because for all the fuss about early access titles cluttering up steam... is anyone actually playing them? I don't know if this is a feature that a developer can choose to turn off, but if you look at a games community page it tells you how many people are currently playing it. Making a similar point on here the other week I took a look at the early access page on Steam (notice Valve has put them in their own section now), and clicking through a number of them... you could see the tumble weeds blowing by. Went through about a dozen and couldn't find a single active player. Unlike pre order or FTP crumby developers aren't raking in fistfulls of cash with this business practice.
And really this is an area where some common sense and consumer awareness goes a long way. Not sure about an early access game is a scam? Then don't buy it. The game actually interests you but you don't feel a need to support the developers and/or beta test a game? Then wait for the full launch to buy it. If someone wants to throw away their money, or are actually interested in supporting the developers/beta testing, then let them spend their money. Acting like a self entitled brat and telling the developers to go back to their room and don't come out until the game is ready for me to play doesn't help anything.
I mean on PC gaming even with properly developed & published games it's usually a good idea to wait a few weeks, as there's always bugs at launch that need to be patched out. This isn't a recent trend that scummy developers/publishers are pushing, but rather PC gaming has always been like this. The negative aspect is how the practice is creeping into console, where a stable at release game used to be one of its prime selling points.
Why 'fools gold'? Because for all the fuss about early access titles cluttering up steam... is anyone actually playing them? I don't know if this is a feature that a developer can choose to turn off, but if you look at a games community page it tells you how many people are currently playing it. Making a similar point on here the other week I took a look at the early access page on Steam (notice Valve has put them in their own section now), and clicking through a number of them... you could see the tumble weeds blowing by. Went through about a dozen and couldn't find a single active player. Unlike pre order or FTP crumby developers aren't raking in fistfulls of cash with this business practice.
And really this is an area where some common sense and consumer awareness goes a long way. Not sure about an early access game is a scam? Then don't buy it. The game actually interests you but you don't feel a need to support the developers and/or beta test a game? Then wait for the full launch to buy it. If someone wants to throw away their money, or are actually interested in supporting the developers/beta testing, then let them spend their money. Acting like a self entitled brat and telling the developers to go back to their room and don't come out until the game is ready for me to play doesn't help anything.
I mean on PC gaming even with properly developed & published games it's usually a good idea to wait a few weeks, as there's always bugs at launch that need to be patched out. This isn't a recent trend that scummy developers/publishers are pushing, but rather PC gaming has always been like this. The negative aspect is how the practice is creeping into console, where a stable at release game used to be one of its prime selling points.