I find it okay for music games like Rock Band, because you can't have 1,000 songs on a couple discs. For shooter games it's usually a rip-off, I mean, why would you pay 1/4 of the games original cost for 2-3 more maps?
Pretty much this, and now companies are attacking the used gaming market. Games like Mortal Kombat will require $10 to play online after two days, for used copies. So pretty much now I buy games used when they're in 40 dollar range. The price of games has gone up and companies still think its appropriate to withhold 10% of the game for more profits, fuck that.Antari said:No the world can be ALOT better than the 80's and 90's if they'd put the effort into it. Companies that release DLC land themselves on my automatic NO BUY list. Ya I'm pretty damn bored these days. But I'm not wasting my money on crap.
I wasn't aware that you worked at EA, Capcom and Ubisoft and/or are good friends with the Dev teams and marketing. Since, as you know, its impossible to judge what a company does with its products and resources unless you actually have access to information on resources, which is usually kept under lock and key inside of the company. Of course saying what they have and don't have at any point based purely on what someone sees as a consumer outside of company and without access to this information leads to essentially guess and incorrect assumptions.[/sarcasm]Dexter111 said:Yes they do, EA certainly does and Capcom, Ubisoft and a few others too, provably even... and no it doesn't mean that "DLC will never get made". It might mean that we will maybe get some Expansion Packs again instead... you remember those things right? A lot of the Bioware games for example came with them and they were often complete stories or plot points that added another 10-20 hours to the game and were worth the money... there's also some "DLC" nowadays wrongly labeled as such like the Battlefield Vietnam Expansion or the complete stories of GTA IV...Twilight_guy said:If you boycott DLC its not going to make developers put the DLC into the initial game, it means that DLC will never get made. Developers don't laugh at you and giggle evilly by cutting up the game and reserving part of it.
Nope. If you don't buy the DLC then you miss side stories on the overarching storyline. Lair of the Shadow Broker, Arrival are all completely optional. As in You don't have to do it at all, in fact if you played Lair of the Shadow Broker you would know its all about Liara and her thing she mentions when you meet her. So your idea of lazy writing becomes the fleshing out of a story of a former compatriot, on of which you had very little interaction with in Mass Effect 2 and is OPTIONAL. You can keep making things up and pretending your right.RedEyesBlackGamer said:ME was announced as a trilogy. Despite being able to plan around that, BW still has to use DLC to fill in gaps in the main story. That is a failure on their part.Elamdri said:Kinda like how Starcraft: Brood War significantly expanded on the plot of Starcraft, yet wasn't included in the original Starcraft game?RedEyesBlackGamer said:The Mass Effect situation pisses me off. DLC is fine. But when you release DLC that significantly affects the plot of a trilogy then I call foul. I paid 64$ for ME2, and I damn well expect a self-contained story. If you have to have DLC that bridges 2 to 3 then you failed as writers. How about spending more time developing a game? Oh no, we have nonsensical deadlines to meet.
I seriously don't get this. If you include everything in a giant package, charge gamers the same price they paid for the game minus 10 bucks and call it an expansion pack, no one whines. But if you chop that content up into little chunks and sell it for 10 bucks, it's suddenly the worst thing in the world.
assuming they get to that point.Orcus The Ultimate said:well, when they start realizing they're getting a bad reputation, i assume they'll change their approach on it.L3m0n_L1m3 said:Should you boycott nearly every single company out there?
Go for it, you won't get very far though. Not that internet boycotts ever do.
I concur. If I'm essentially paying for "unlock keys" that could've been included in the game itself via some special condition (i.e. costumes in S/SF4), then that can suck fuck all.ParadiseOnceLost said:Depends on the game and DLC. I will never buy a map pack for a shooter that is over $7, but later this month I will prolly plunk down $40 to get all the Mass Effect 2 DLC. If the game is good and shipped completely whole (what they are selling as DLC is not an integral part of the game). I have no problem buying the game and paying a little extra for DLC.
Glad i held your attention long enough for you to reach that point.Sober Thal said:Your reply was good up until this last part. Then it becomes difficult to take you seriously.EllEzDee said:snip
Oh, another thing, please don't use "lolz" in a sentence again. I understand your mental capacity is far lower than that of the average user, but that's no excuse for using such words.
As for the thread, my point was that the OP put no thought whatsoever into it.
"HUH I SAW THIS COMMENT, I'LL MAKE CONTROVERSIAL THREAD".
His questions to the readers were just as well thought out as his topic. "SHOULD WE GO BACK TO HOW IT WAS????" and "SHOULD WE BOYCOTT DLC HUUUURRR???". The perfect example of trying to make a thread for the sheer hope of it being popular.
Oh well. Sorry I bothered you.
Don't just boycott, one sale makes little difference as they don't know it's gone. If you send them emails and letters every single time they bring out a game that you're not buying they're more likely to take notice. Especially companies like Bioware and Valve that actually pay attention to their fans.Antari said:No the world can be ALOT better than the 80's and 90's if they'd put the effort into it. Companies that release DLC land themselves on my automatic NO BUY list. Ya I'm pretty damn bored these days. But I'm not wasting my money on crap.
Then I'd be wasting my time. I just don't buy from them. Its that simple. If other people start thinking like me, cool, the industry will likely change. If not, then I'll probably stick with the games I have, and start in on another hobby.StBishop said:Don't just boycott, one sale makes little difference as they don't know it's gone. If you send them emails and letters every single time they bring out a game that you're not buying they're more likely to take notice. Especially companies like Bioware and Valve that actually pay attention to their fans.Antari said:No the world can be ALOT better than the 80's and 90's if they'd put the effort into it. Companies that release DLC land themselves on my automatic NO BUY list. Ya I'm pretty damn bored these days. But I'm not wasting my money on crap.